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'''Limbo''' is a [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic]] theological term, referring to the concept of a spiritual realm where the souls of righteous people who lived before the time of Christ could dwell until [[Jesus Christ]] made it possible for them to enter [[Heaven]]. A similar concept was used to describe the spiritual state of children who died before they could receive the sacrament of [[baptism]], which the Church regarded as a necessary condition for entering Heaven. The Roman Catholic Church has never endorsed this concept as an official doctrine.
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The word '''limbo''' (late Latin ''limbus'') is a word of Teutonic derivation, meaning literally "hem" or "border," as of a garment, or anything joined on (Italian ''lembo'' or English ''limb''). In common usage, the word “limbo” often refers to a place or state of restraint, confinement or delay, such as the situation of a project which is halted pending action by another person. In literature, it often refers to some sort of symbolic “prison.”
  
{{Otheruses4|the theological concept|other uses of the term|Limbo (disambiguation)}}
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==Roman Catholic concept of Limbo==
In [[Roman Catholicism]], there are two categories of '''limbo'''. The Limbo of the Fathers was where the souls of ancient righteous people went before [[Jesus]] [[Christ]] made it possible for them to enter Heaven. The word '''limbo''' has also been used to refer to Limbo of Children, the thought of a permanent status of the [[baptism|unbaptized]] who die in [[infancy]], without having committed any personal [[sin]]s, but without having been freed from [[original sin]]. Limbo of the Children is a theological speculation that has never received official Church approval.<ref>[http://jimmyakin.typepad.com/defensor_fidei/2006/10/limbo_in_limbo.html]Jimmy Akin, Limbo In Limbo?, October 9, 2006</ref>
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The [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic]] concept of limbo developed as a result of two dogmatic principles of Catholic faith, that all humans are born with original sin and that the sacrament of baptism was necessary in order to receive salvation and enter Heaven, where the souls of the just experience immediate knowledge of [[God]] in perfect happiness. The provincial Council of Carthage (418) declared that, “without baptism, they cannot enter the kingdom of heaven which is eternal life.”  These doctrines presented two difficulties. Prophets and religious fathers of the [[Old Testament]], who had lived in righteousness and were surely deserving of salvation, had preceded [[Jesus]] and therefore had never been baptized. Did this mean that they were to be eternally excluded from happiness in the knowledge of God? The other problem was the situation of infants and children who died before they could be baptized. These children were considered innocent because they had not had the opportunity to commit personal [[sin]], but still had original sin. Would a just and loving God condemn these innocent children to eternal suffering in [[Hell]]?
  
Limbo comes from the latin ''limbus'' meaning a hem or an edge or a boundary.  
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In response, Catholic theologians developed the concept of a region located on the border of Hell and called it ''limbus,'' a Latin word meaning, “an ornamental border to a fringe” or “a band or girdle.” The English word, limbo, first recorded in a work composed around 1378, is from the ablative form of ''limbus,'' the form that would be used in expressions such as “in Limbo.
  
==Limbo of the Fathers==
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===Limbo of the fathers===
[[Image:Domenico Beccafumi 018.jpg|right|thumb|"Jesus in Limbo" by [[Domenico Beccafumi]]]]
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The concept of “limbo” does not appear in the [[Bible]], nor was it ever officially endorsed by the [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic Church]]. Nevertheless it was widely accepted that limbo existed as a temporary dwelling place where the souls of the just, who died before the resurrection of Christ, could wait in happiness for the establishment of the Messianic Kingdom, when they would enter a condition of final and permanent bliss.  
The concept of the limbo of the fathers (''limbus patrum'') is that people who lived good lives but died before Jesus' Resurrection did not go to heaven, but rather had to wait for Christ to open heaven's gates. This concept of limbo affirms that one can get into heaven only through Jesus Christ but does not portray [[Moses]], etc., as being punished eternally in hell.
 
  
The term Limbo does not appear in the Bible, nor is the concept spelled out.
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Theologians interpreted various statements made by [[Jesus Christ]] in the [[New Testament]] as references to a place or state which Catholic tradition called the ''limbus patrum'' (limbo of the fathers).
Roman Catholics take the term [[bosom of Abraham]], which appears in Luke's story of [[Lazarus and Dives]], to refer to limbo.  
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:''Matthew 8:11'' "And I say to you, That many shall come from the east and west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.
The bosom of Abraham represents the blissful state where the righteous dead await [[Judgment Day]].  
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:''Matthew 25:1-11'' Parable of the five foolish and five wise virgins waiting for the marriage feast.
As such, this concept corresponds closely to the concept of limbo of the fathers in that it is neither Heaven nor Hell and the people there are waiting to enter [[paradise]].  
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:''Luke 16:22-23'' Parable of Lazarus and Dives: “And it came to pass the the beggar (Lazarus) died, and was carried by the angels into Abrahams’ bosom: The rich man also died, and was buried; And in hell he lifted up his eyes, being in torment, and saw Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom.”
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:''Luke 23:43'' On the cross, Jesus said to the penitent thief who was crucified beside him, “Verily, I say unto thee, this day thou shalt be with me in paradise.” 
  
Jesus told the "good thief" that the two of them would be together "this day" in "paradise," (Luke 23:43) but between the Resurrection and the Ascension, Jesus told his followers that he has "not yet ascended to the Father" (John 20:17). A possible resolution to this apparent contradiction lies in the fact that Jesus' statement to the thief can be understood in two different ways, depending on where you place the comma (which was not present in the original manuscripts): either "Truly I say to you, today you shall be with Me in Paradise" or "Truly I say to you today, you shall be with Me in Paradise" (Luke 23:43, NASB). The latter interpretation would be consistent with Jesus's subsequent statement to his followers. By this reading, the good thief waited in limbo until the Resurrection made it possible for him to enter heaven. The Greek Fathers however, who did not accept the concept of limbo, did not see a contradiction in these two statements, and read John 20:17 as a reference to the Ascension of Jesus.
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In ''Ephesians 4:9,'' Paul teaches that, before ascending into Heaven, Christ "also descended first into the lower parts of the earth," and Peter ''(1 Peter 3:18-20)'' teaches that "being put to death indeed, in the flesh, but enlivened in the spirit," Christ went and "preached to those souls that were in prison, which had been some time disobedient, when they waited for the patience of God in the days of [[Noah]]." Medieval drama sometimes portrayed Christ leading a dramatic assault, "[[The Harrowing of Hell]]," during the three days between the [[Crucifixion]] and the resurrection. In this assault, Jesus freed the souls of the just and escorted them triumphantly into heaven. This imagery is still used in the [[Eastern Orthodox Church]]'s Holy Saturday liturgy (between [[Good Friday]] and Pascha).
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[[Image:Domenico Beccafumi 018.jpg|right|thumb|"Jesus in Limbo" by [[Domenico Beccafumi]]]]
  
Jesus is also described as preaching to "the spirits in prison" (1 Pet 3:19). Medieval drama sometimes portrayed Christ leading a dramatic assault &mdash; The [[Harrowing of Hell]] &mdash; during the three days between the [[Crucifixion]] and the resurrection. In this assault, Jesus freed the souls of the just and escorted them triumphantly into heaven. This imagery is still used in the [[Eastern Orthodox Church]]'s [[Holy Saturday]] [[liturgy]] (between [[Good Friday]] and [[Pascha]]).
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The concept of the limbo of the fathers ''(limbus patrum)'' is that people who lived good lives but died before Jesus' Resurrection did not go to heaven, but rather had to wait for Christ to open heaven's gates. This concept of limbo affirms that one can get into heaven only through Jesus Christ but does not portray [[Moses]]and other Old Testament figures as being punished eternally in hell.
  
==Limbo of Children==
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===Limbo of children===
Many Roman Catholic theologians believe that unbaptized children, as well as others lacking the use of reason, go to "the limbo of children" (''limbus infantium'' or ''limbus puerorum'') after death. The Church, however, does not teach this concept as doctrine.
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The foundational importance of the sacrament of [[baptism]] (using water) or the non-sacramental baptism of desire (justification through experiencing repentance and a strong desire for baptism) or baptism of blood (martyrdom) in [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic]] [[theology]] gave rise to the argument that the unbaptized are not eligible for entry into Heaven, because the [[original sin]] of human nature precludes them from the immediate knowledge of God enjoyed by the souls in Heaven. Since infants are incapable of either professing their faith or performing acts of Christian charity, the only means through which they might receive the grace of justification required for salvation is baptism with water. There was a question about whether infants who died before being baptized could be saved. Early Church writers, notably [[Augustine of Hippo|St. Augustine]], considered that unbaptized infants were excluded from heaven, and thus went to hell.<ref>St. Augustine, [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/15011.htm On Merit and the Forgiveness of Sins, and the Baptism of Infants.] Retrieved March 22, 2007.</ref>
  
If heaven is a state of supernatural happiness and a union with [[God]], and hell is a state of torture and a separation from God, then limbo is a sort of intermediate state, in which souls are denied the [[beatific vision]], but saved from the torment of hell, according to speculations by many eminent Roman Catholic theologians. Saint [[Thomas Aquinas]] described the limbo of children as an eternal state of natural joy, untempered by any sense of loss at how much greater their joy might have been had they been baptized. He argued that this was a reward of natural happiness for natural virtue; a reward of supernatural happiness for merely natural virtue would be inappropriate since, due to [[original sin]], unbaptized children lack the necessary supernatural [[Divine grace|grace]].
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Many Roman Catholic theologians believe that unbaptized children, as well as others lacking the use of reason, go to "the limbo of children" (''limbus infantium'' or ''limbus puerorum'') after death; limbo is a sort of intermediate state, in which souls are denied the immediate knowledge of God, but saved from the torment of hell. [[Thomas Aquinas]] described the limbo of children as an eternal state of natural joy, untempered by any sense of loss at how much greater their joy might have been had they been baptized. He argued that this was a reward of natural happiness for natural virtue; a reward of supernatural happiness for merely natural virtue would be inappropriate since, due to [[original sin]], unbaptized children lack the necessary supernatural [[Divine grace|grace]]. The sixteenth century theologian, [[Cajetan]], suggested that infants dying in the womb before birth, and so before ordinary sacramental baptism could be administered, might be saved through their mother's wish for their baptism; attempts to have his theory condemned as heretical were rejected by the Council of Trent.<ref>''Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique,'' Volume 2, columns 305-6.</ref>
  
The foundational importance of the [[Sacraments (Catholic Church)|sacrament]] of [[baptism]] (using water) or the non-sacramental [[baptism of desire]] or [[baptism of blood]] in Roman Catholic [[theology]] gives rise to the argument that the unbaptized are not eligible for entry into heaven, because the [[original sin]] of human nature precludes the unbaptized from the [[beatific vision]] enjoyed by the souls in [[heaven]].  
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Limbo of the Children is a theological speculation that has never received official endorsement from the Roman Catholic Church.<ref>Jimmy Akin, [http://jimmyakin.typepad.com/defensor_fidei/2006/10/limbo_in_limbo.html Limbo In Limbo?] Retrieved March 22, 2007.</ref> During the last three centuries, individual Catholic theologians (Bianchi in 1768, H. Klee in 1835, Caron in 1855, H. Schell in 1893, Ludwig Ott in 1952) have formulated alternative theories concerning the salvation of children who die unbaptized. By 1992 ''Catechism of the Catholic Church'' expressed the hope that children who die unbaptized might still be saved. The International Theological Commission was asked by [[pope|Pope John Paul II]] to consider the question of the fate of unbaptized babies. Under Pope Benedict XVI, the Commission is expected to recommend in their report that the doctrine that all children who die do so “in the hope of eternal salvation” be formally adopted, thus rejecting the theological hypothesis of “limbo.
  
Since infants are incapable of either professing their faith or performing acts of Christian charity, the only known means through which they might receive the [[grace of justification]] required for salvation is through water baptism (or baptism of blood, as in the case of the martyred [[Holy Innocents]]).  If, for whatever reason, an infant dies unbaptized (see [[infant baptism]]), there is a question about whether such children can be saved.  Early Church writers, notably [[Augustine of Hippo|St. Augustine]], considered that unbaptized infants were excluded from heaven, and thus went to hell<ref>[http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/15011.htm On Merit and the Forgiveness of Sins, and the Baptism of Infants], by St. Augustine</ref>. As noted above, later theologians suggested that such children, being innocent of any personal sins, might go to a state of limbo outside heaven, but without the suffering of hell, enjoying a state of perfect natural happiness.
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==Religious concepts similar to limbo==
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[[Protestant]] and [[Orthodox]] denominations do not accept the existence of limbo; it is a Roman Catholic concept<ref>Religious Tolerance, [http://www.religioustolerance.org/limbo3.htm Limbo: Recent statements by the Catholic church; Protestant views on Limbo.] Retrieved March 22, 2007.</ref>. [[Martin Luther]] and others have taught that the souls of those who have died are unconscious (or even nonexistent), awaiting their destiny on a future [[Judgment Day]].  
  
===Subsequent development on the lot of unbaptized children===
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The [[Zoroastrian]] concept of [[hamistagan]] is a neutral state in which a soul that was neither good nor evil awaits Judgment Day.
The necessity of baptism was defined by a general council of the church, the [[Council of Florence]], Session 11 (Bull ''Cantate Domino''), Feb 4, 1442, and had earlier been affirmed at the local [[Council of Carthage]] 417 C.E.  John Wyclif's attack on the necessity of infant baptism had been condemned by another general council, the [[Council of Constance]], Session 15, July 6, 1415 C.E.  However, the [[Council of Trent]], Session 6, 1547<ref>[http://history.hanover.edu/early/trent/ct06d1.htm Council of Trent, Session 6]</ref> taught that either baptism or [[baptism of desire|desire for baptism]] is necessary for salvation, so it is possible to be saved without receiving the actual sacrament of baptism.
 
  
If adults could effectively be baptised through a desire for the sacrament (supposing they died before it was actually administered), perhaps sacramentally unbaptised infants too might be saved by some waterless equivalent of ordinary baptism.  While infants would not themselves be capable of a desire for the sacrament of baptism, perhaps the desire for their baptism by the adults who were responsible for their religious upbringing (or by the Church in general) would suffice to grant such children a baptism of desire.  One major sixteenth-century theologian, [[Cajetan]], suggested that infants dying in the womb before birth, and so before ordinary sacramental baptism could be administered, might be saved through their mother's wish for their baptism.  Thus, there was no consensus that the Council of Florence had excluded salvation of infants by such an extra-sacramental equivalents of baptism; and attempts to have Cajetan's theory (that infants dead in the womb can be saved without the sacrament of baptism) condemned as heretical were rejected by the Council of Trent.<ref>''Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique'', Volume 2, 'Baptême', columns 305-6.</ref>
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==Limbo in literature==
 
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In the ''Divine Comedy,'' [[Dante]] depicts limbo as the first circle of Hell, located beyond the river Acheron but before the judgment seat of Minos. The virtuous [[pagan]]s of classical history and [[mythology]] inhabit a brightly lit and beautiful, but somber, castle which is seemingly a medievalized version of [[Elysium]]. In the same work, a semi-infernal region, above limbo on the other side of Acheron, but inside the Gate of Hell, is the "vestibule" of Hell and houses so-called "neutralists" or "opportunists," who devoted their lives neither to good nor to evil.
Through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries individual theologians (Bianchi in [[1768]], H. Klee in [[1835]], Caron in [[1855]], H. Schell in [[1893]]) continued to formulate theories of how children who died unbaptised might still be saved.  By [[1952]] a theologian such as [[Ludwig Ott]] could, in a widely used and well-regarded manual, openly teach the possibility that children who die unbaptised might be saved for heaven<ref>"Other emergency means of baptism for children dying without sacramental baptism, such as prayer and the desire of the parents or the Church (vicarious baptism of desire - Cajetan), or the attainment of the use of reason in the moment of death, so that the dying child can decide for or against God (baptism of desire - H. Klee), or suffering and death of the child as quasi-Sacrament (baptism of suffering - H. Schell), are indeed possible, but their actuality cannot be proved from Revelation. Cf. [[Enchiridion Symbolorum|D]] 712." Ludwig Ott, ''[[Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma]]'', Book 2, Section 2, § 25 (p. 114 of the 1963 edition)</ref> - though he still represented their going to limbo as the commonly taught opinion.  Even before Vatican II, theologians were widely and freely investigating alternatives to limbo - even if ordinary Catholics had not yet heard of such theories.  When in [[1984]], Joseph Ratzinger, then Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, announced in ''[[The Ratzinger Report]]'' that as a private theologian he rejected the claim that children who die unbaptised cannot attain salvation, he was speaking for many academic theologians of his background and pre-conciliar training.  Thus by [[1992]] the [[Catechism of the Catholic Church]] could express the hope that children who die unbaptised might still be saved:
 
 
 
[http://www.vatican.va/archive/catechism/p2s2c1a1.htm#VI CCC #1261] states:
 
 
 
:''As regards children who have died without baptism, the Church can only entrust them to the mercy of God, as she does in her funeral rites for them. Indeed, the great mercy of God, who desires that all men should be saved, and Jesus' tenderness toward children, which caused him to say, 'Let the children come to me, do not hinder them' [Mark 10:14, cf. 1 Tim. 2:4], allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who have died without baptism. All the more urgent is the Church's call not to prevent little children coming to Christ through the gift of holy baptism.''
 
  
The [[International Theological Commission]] was asked by [[Pope John Paul II]] to consider the question of the fate of unbaptized babies. Under [[Pope Benedict XVI]], the Commission is expected to recommend in their report that the doctrine that all children who die do so “in the hope of eternal salvation” be formally adopted, thus rejecting the theological hypothesis of Limbo.  The report was to be published towards the end of 2006, but is still unpublished as of January 2007.
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In [[literature]], the name "limbo" is sometimes applied in a wider sense to a place or state of restraint, confinement, or exclusion, and is practically equivalent to "prison." In ''Henry VIII,'' Shakespeare uses “limbo of the Fathers” to signify prison. In the Italian Renaissance poet [[Luduvico Ariosto]]'s ''Orlando Furioso'' (1532), the knight Astolfo visits the moon's Limbo and discovers all of Earth's wastages: Talents locked up in named vases, and bribes hanging on gold hooks. [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]] uses “limbo”  to describe the waking nightmares of an opium addict: "The sole true Something—This! In Limbo's Den/It frightens Ghosts, as here Ghosts frighten men."
 
 
==Limbo in other denominations and religions==
 
The Limbo of Children is a Roman Catholic concept; [[Protestant]] and [[Orthodox]] denominations do not accept it <ref>[http://www.religioustolerance.org/limbo3.htm Limbo: Recent statements by the Catholic church; Protestant views on Limbo] at Religioustolerance.org</ref>.
 
 
 
[[Martin Luther]], [[Jehovah's Witnesses]], [[Christadelphians]], and others have taught that the [[soul sleep|dead are unconscious]] (or even nonexistent), awaiting their destiny on [[Judgment Day]]. Since the dead, in this view, are neither rewarded nor punished (yet), that state is similar to limbo.
 
 
 
The [[Zoroastrian]] concept of [[hamistagan]] is similar to limbo. Hamistagan is a neutral state in which a soul that was neither good nor evil awaits [[Judgment Day]].
 
 
 
[[Discordianism]] considers Limbo to be the dwelling place of the goddess [[Eris (mythology)|Eris]].
 
 
 
==Limbo in literature==
 
In the ''[[Divine Comedy]]'', [[Dante]] depicts Limbo as the first circle of Hell, located beyond the river [[Acheron]] but before the judgment seat of Minos. The  virtuous pagans of classical history and mythology inhabit a brightly lit and beautiful &mdash; but somber &mdash; castle which is seemingly a medievalized version of [[Elysium]]. In the same work, a semi-infernal region, above Limbo on the other side of Acheron, but inside the Gate of Hell, also exists &mdash; it is the "vestibule" of Hell and houses so-called "neutralists" or "opportunists," who devoted their lives neither to good nor to evil; its residents include those angels who did not fight at all in the war that resulted in the expulsion of [[Lucifer]] from Heaven, and also [[Celestine V]], one of the few [[Pope]]s in Vatican history to have abdicated (interestingly, however, Celestine was later canonized and is now known as St. Peter Celestine).
 
  
 
==Limbo as a colloquialism==
 
==Limbo as a colloquialism==
Taken from the original meaning, in [[colloquial speech]], "limbo" is any status where a person or project is held up, and nothing can be done until another action happens. For example, a [[construction]] project might be described as "in limbo" if political considerations delay its [[construction permit|permit]].
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Taken from the original meaning, in colloquial speech, "limbo" often refers to a place or state of restraint, confinement or delay, such as the situation of a project which is halted pending action by another person. A "legal limbo" may occur when conflicting laws or court rulings leave a person without legal recourse.
  
A "legal limbo" may occur when varying [[law]]s or court [[ruling]]s leave a person without recourse. For example, a person may earn "too much" to receive [[Welfare (financial aid)|public assistance]] from the [[government]], but not enough to actually pay for basic necessities. Likewise, various parties in a dispute may be pointing [[blame]] at each other, rather than fixing the problem, and leaving the person or group suffering from the problem to continue to suffer in limbo.
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==Notes==
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<references/>
  
The [[Amstrad PCW]]'s bundled word processing software, [[LocoScript]], used the term "in limbo" to refer to files which had been deleted but which could still be restored, a concept similar to that later implemented by the [[Trash]] in the [[Apple Macintosh]] and the [[Recycle Bin]] in [[Microsoft Windows 95]]. On the PCW, the files "in limbo" were marked as belonging to [[CP/M Plus]] users 8 to 15. These files were deleted automatically when the space they occupied was needed. It could therefore be dangerous to access a disk containing files created with CP/M Plus using LocoScript, since LocoScript could decide to delete anything in users 8 to 15.
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== References==
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*Beilby, James K. and Paul R. Eddy, eds. ''Divine Foreknowledge: 4 Views.'' InterVarsity Press, 2001. ISBN 0830826521
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*Loth, Bernard. ''Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique, Vol. 2''. French and European Publications, 1970. ISBN 0828865191
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*Stasiak, Kurt.''Sacramental Theology: Means of Grace, Ways of Life (Catholic Basics)''. Loyola Press, 2001. ISBN 0829417214 
  
In the licensing of [[houses in multiple occupation]] (HMOs), properties registered under a previous scheme, but would not be licensable under mandatory arrangements, would go into a state of limbo when they expire, until the status of any potential additional licensing scheme is fully resolved.
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==External links==
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All links retrieved October 29, 2022.
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*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09256a.htm Limbo] ''The Catholic Encyclopedia''.
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*[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/heaven-hell/ Heaven and Hell in Christian thought] Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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* Dyer, [http://www.tldm.org/news8/Limbo.htm The existence of Limbo: a common doctrine from which it would be rash to depart...] ''These Last Days Ministries'', December 28, 2005.
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* Brian Harrison, [http://www.seattlecatholic.com/a051207.html Could Limbo Be 'Abolished'?] ''Seattle Catholic'', December 7, 2005.
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* John Hooper, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,2763,1653832,00.html Babies to be freed from limbo] ''The Guardian'', November 30th, 2005.
  
== See Also ==
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===General philosophy sources===
 
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*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
*[[Purgatory]]
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*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]  
*[[Heaven]]
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*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online]  
*[[Hell]]
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*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg]
 
 
== References ==
 
* {{Catholic}} ([http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09256a.htm Limbo])
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Hilary
 
| last = Clarke
 
| pages =
 
| title = Now it's the turn of limbo to be cast into oblivion
 
| date = November 30th, 2005
 
| publisher = [[Electronic Telegraph]]
 
| url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/30/wchurch130.xml
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| last = Dyer
 
| pages =
 
| title = The existence of Limbo: a common doctrine from which it would be rash to depart...
 
| date = December 28, 2005
 
| publisher = [[These Last Days Ministries]]
 
| url = http://www.tldm.org/news8/Limbo.htm
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Ian
 
| last = Fisher
 
| pages =
 
| title = Limbo, an Afterlife Tradition, May Be Doomed by the Vatican
 
| date = December 28th, 2005
 
| publisher = [[The New York Times]]
 
| url = http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/28/international/europe/28limbo.html
 
}}
 
* {{cite book
 
| first = Donald
 
| last = Goodman
 
| pages =
 
| title = Thomistic Salvation:  A Layman's Guide
 
| publisher = Goretti Publications
 
| url = http://gorpub.freeshell.org/books.html#thomsalv
 
}}
 
* {{cite news 
 
| first = Brian
 
| last = Harrison
 
| pages =
 
| title = Could Limbo Be 'Abolished'?
 
| date = December 7, 2005
 
| publisher = [[Seattle Catholic]]
 
| url = http://www.seattlecatholic.com/a051207.html
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = John
 
| last = Hooper
 
| pages =
 
| title = Babies to be freed from limbo
 
| date = November 30th, 2005
 
| publisher = [[The Guardian]]
 
| url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,2763,1653832,00.html
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Stephen
 
| last = McGinty
 
| pages =
 
| title = Pope to abandon idea unbaptised babies suspended forever in limbo
 
| date = November 30th, 2005
 
| publisher = [[The Scotsman]]
 
| url = http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=2324222005
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Robert T.
 
| last = Miller
 
| pages =
 
| title = Limbo and the Will of God
 
| date = October 17, 2006
 
| publisher = [[First Things]]
 
| url = http://www.firstthings.com/onthesquare/?p=502
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Richard
 
| last = Owen
 
| pages =
 
| title = Limbo consigned to history books
 
| date = November 30th, 2005
 
| publisher = [[Times Online]]
 
| url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13509-1897480,00.html
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Thomas
 
| last = Sparks
 
| pages =
 
| title = Unbaptized Infants Suffer Fire and Limbo is a Heretical Pelagian Fable
 
| url = http://www.romancatholicism.org/jansenism/limbo-pelagianism.htm
 
}}
 
* {{cite news
 
| first = Cindy
 
| last = Wooden
 
| pages =
 
| title = Closing the doors of limbo: Theologians say it was hypothesis
 
| date = December 2, 2005
 
| publisher = [[Catholic News Service]]
 
| url = http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0506867.htm
 
}}
 
 
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
  
[[Category:Christian eschatology]]
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[[Category:religion]]
[[Category:Christian theology]]
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[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
[[Category:Life after death]]
 
[[Category:Christian cosmology]]
 
  
[[cs:Limbus]]
 
[[de:Limbus (Theologie)]]
 
[[es:Limbo de los niños]]
 
[[it:Limbo]]
 
[[he:לימבו]]
 
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*This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.

Latest revision as of 04:09, 29 October 2022

Limbo is a Roman Catholic theological term, referring to the concept of a spiritual realm where the souls of righteous people who lived before the time of Christ could dwell until Jesus Christ made it possible for them to enter Heaven. A similar concept was used to describe the spiritual state of children who died before they could receive the sacrament of baptism, which the Church regarded as a necessary condition for entering Heaven. The Roman Catholic Church has never endorsed this concept as an official doctrine.

The word limbo (late Latin limbus) is a word of Teutonic derivation, meaning literally "hem" or "border," as of a garment, or anything joined on (Italian lembo or English limb). In common usage, the word “limbo” often refers to a place or state of restraint, confinement or delay, such as the situation of a project which is halted pending action by another person. In literature, it often refers to some sort of symbolic “prison.”

Roman Catholic concept of Limbo

The Roman Catholic concept of limbo developed as a result of two dogmatic principles of Catholic faith, that all humans are born with original sin and that the sacrament of baptism was necessary in order to receive salvation and enter Heaven, where the souls of the just experience immediate knowledge of God in perfect happiness. The provincial Council of Carthage (418) declared that, “without baptism, they cannot enter the kingdom of heaven which is eternal life.” These doctrines presented two difficulties. Prophets and religious fathers of the Old Testament, who had lived in righteousness and were surely deserving of salvation, had preceded Jesus and therefore had never been baptized. Did this mean that they were to be eternally excluded from happiness in the knowledge of God? The other problem was the situation of infants and children who died before they could be baptized. These children were considered innocent because they had not had the opportunity to commit personal sin, but still had original sin. Would a just and loving God condemn these innocent children to eternal suffering in Hell?

In response, Catholic theologians developed the concept of a region located on the border of Hell and called it limbus, a Latin word meaning, “an ornamental border to a fringe” or “a band or girdle.” The English word, limbo, first recorded in a work composed around 1378, is from the ablative form of limbus, the form that would be used in expressions such as “in Limbo.”

Limbo of the fathers

The concept of “limbo” does not appear in the Bible, nor was it ever officially endorsed by the Roman Catholic Church. Nevertheless it was widely accepted that limbo existed as a temporary dwelling place where the souls of the just, who died before the resurrection of Christ, could wait in happiness for the establishment of the Messianic Kingdom, when they would enter a condition of final and permanent bliss.

Theologians interpreted various statements made by Jesus Christ in the New Testament as references to a place or state which Catholic tradition called the limbus patrum (limbo of the fathers).

Matthew 8:11 "And I say to you, That many shall come from the east and west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.”
Matthew 25:1-11 Parable of the five foolish and five wise virgins waiting for the marriage feast.
Luke 16:22-23 Parable of Lazarus and Dives: “And it came to pass the the beggar (Lazarus) died, and was carried by the angels into Abrahams’ bosom: The rich man also died, and was buried; And in hell he lifted up his eyes, being in torment, and saw Abraham afar off, and Lazarus in his bosom.”
Luke 23:43 On the cross, Jesus said to the penitent thief who was crucified beside him, “Verily, I say unto thee, this day thou shalt be with me in paradise.”

In Ephesians 4:9, Paul teaches that, before ascending into Heaven, Christ "also descended first into the lower parts of the earth," and Peter (1 Peter 3:18-20) teaches that "being put to death indeed, in the flesh, but enlivened in the spirit," Christ went and "preached to those souls that were in prison, which had been some time disobedient, when they waited for the patience of God in the days of Noah." Medieval drama sometimes portrayed Christ leading a dramatic assault, "The Harrowing of Hell," during the three days between the Crucifixion and the resurrection. In this assault, Jesus freed the souls of the just and escorted them triumphantly into heaven. This imagery is still used in the Eastern Orthodox Church's Holy Saturday liturgy (between Good Friday and Pascha).

"Jesus in Limbo" by Domenico Beccafumi

The concept of the limbo of the fathers (limbus patrum) is that people who lived good lives but died before Jesus' Resurrection did not go to heaven, but rather had to wait for Christ to open heaven's gates. This concept of limbo affirms that one can get into heaven only through Jesus Christ but does not portray Mosesand other Old Testament figures as being punished eternally in hell.

Limbo of children

The foundational importance of the sacrament of baptism (using water) or the non-sacramental baptism of desire (justification through experiencing repentance and a strong desire for baptism) or baptism of blood (martyrdom) in Roman Catholic theology gave rise to the argument that the unbaptized are not eligible for entry into Heaven, because the original sin of human nature precludes them from the immediate knowledge of God enjoyed by the souls in Heaven. Since infants are incapable of either professing their faith or performing acts of Christian charity, the only means through which they might receive the grace of justification required for salvation is baptism with water. There was a question about whether infants who died before being baptized could be saved. Early Church writers, notably St. Augustine, considered that unbaptized infants were excluded from heaven, and thus went to hell.[1]

Many Roman Catholic theologians believe that unbaptized children, as well as others lacking the use of reason, go to "the limbo of children" (limbus infantium or limbus puerorum) after death; limbo is a sort of intermediate state, in which souls are denied the immediate knowledge of God, but saved from the torment of hell. Thomas Aquinas described the limbo of children as an eternal state of natural joy, untempered by any sense of loss at how much greater their joy might have been had they been baptized. He argued that this was a reward of natural happiness for natural virtue; a reward of supernatural happiness for merely natural virtue would be inappropriate since, due to original sin, unbaptized children lack the necessary supernatural grace. The sixteenth century theologian, Cajetan, suggested that infants dying in the womb before birth, and so before ordinary sacramental baptism could be administered, might be saved through their mother's wish for their baptism; attempts to have his theory condemned as heretical were rejected by the Council of Trent.[2]

Limbo of the Children is a theological speculation that has never received official endorsement from the Roman Catholic Church.[3] During the last three centuries, individual Catholic theologians (Bianchi in 1768, H. Klee in 1835, Caron in 1855, H. Schell in 1893, Ludwig Ott in 1952) have formulated alternative theories concerning the salvation of children who die unbaptized. By 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church expressed the hope that children who die unbaptized might still be saved. The International Theological Commission was asked by Pope John Paul II to consider the question of the fate of unbaptized babies. Under Pope Benedict XVI, the Commission is expected to recommend in their report that the doctrine that all children who die do so “in the hope of eternal salvation” be formally adopted, thus rejecting the theological hypothesis of “limbo.”

Religious concepts similar to limbo

Protestant and Orthodox denominations do not accept the existence of limbo; it is a Roman Catholic concept[4]. Martin Luther and others have taught that the souls of those who have died are unconscious (or even nonexistent), awaiting their destiny on a future Judgment Day.

The Zoroastrian concept of hamistagan is a neutral state in which a soul that was neither good nor evil awaits Judgment Day.

Limbo in literature

In the Divine Comedy, Dante depicts limbo as the first circle of Hell, located beyond the river Acheron but before the judgment seat of Minos. The virtuous pagans of classical history and mythology inhabit a brightly lit and beautiful, but somber, castle which is seemingly a medievalized version of Elysium. In the same work, a semi-infernal region, above limbo on the other side of Acheron, but inside the Gate of Hell, is the "vestibule" of Hell and houses so-called "neutralists" or "opportunists," who devoted their lives neither to good nor to evil.

In literature, the name "limbo" is sometimes applied in a wider sense to a place or state of restraint, confinement, or exclusion, and is practically equivalent to "prison." In Henry VIII, Shakespeare uses “limbo of the Fathers” to signify prison. In the Italian Renaissance poet Luduvico Ariosto's Orlando Furioso (1532), the knight Astolfo visits the moon's Limbo and discovers all of Earth's wastages: Talents locked up in named vases, and bribes hanging on gold hooks. Samuel Taylor Coleridge uses “limbo” to describe the waking nightmares of an opium addict: "The sole true Something—This! In Limbo's Den/It frightens Ghosts, as here Ghosts frighten men."

Limbo as a colloquialism

Taken from the original meaning, in colloquial speech, "limbo" often refers to a place or state of restraint, confinement or delay, such as the situation of a project which is halted pending action by another person. A "legal limbo" may occur when conflicting laws or court rulings leave a person without legal recourse.

Notes

  1. St. Augustine, On Merit and the Forgiveness of Sins, and the Baptism of Infants. Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  2. Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique, Volume 2, columns 305-6.
  3. Jimmy Akin, Limbo In Limbo? Retrieved March 22, 2007.
  4. Religious Tolerance, Limbo: Recent statements by the Catholic church; Protestant views on Limbo. Retrieved March 22, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Beilby, James K. and Paul R. Eddy, eds. Divine Foreknowledge: 4 Views. InterVarsity Press, 2001. ISBN 0830826521
  • Loth, Bernard. Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique, Vol. 2. French and European Publications, 1970. ISBN 0828865191
  • Stasiak, Kurt.Sacramental Theology: Means of Grace, Ways of Life (Catholic Basics). Loyola Press, 2001. ISBN 0829417214

External links

All links retrieved October 29, 2022.

General philosophy sources

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  • This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.