ANSWERS: 13
  • Eastern Tennessee, up the road from Chawswaller.
  • No one knows. That's why it's Limbo. If anyone knew where it was, it wouldn't be Limbo, it would just be another place.
  • According to the BBC's Religion and Ethics site, the church held that before the 13th Century, all unbaptised people, including new born babies who died, would go to hell. This was because original sin - the punishment that God inflicted on humanity because of Adam and Eve's disobedience - had not been cleansed by baptism. This idea however was criticised by Peter Abelard, a French scholastic philosophiser, who said that babies who had no personal sin didn't even deserve punishment. It was Abelard who introduced the idea of limbo. The word comes from the Latin "limbus", meaning the edge. This would be a state of existence where unbaptised babies, and those unfortunate enough to have been born before Jesus, would not experience pain but neither would they experience the Beatific Vision of God. Limbo is a Catholic teaching. It has no basis from the Bible.
  • It always hangs out in the middle between two possible decisions.
  • It's in Jamaica Mon.
  • It East of the Sun and West of the Moon.
  • It's a state of mind...
  • Limbo is down on the beach. We've also got waverunners in the water and steaks over by the cabanna. Have a great time!
  • Under the bamboo pole...
  • Under a pole in Jamaica.
  • It does not exist. The Church has pondered the suggestion of Limbo for a few hundred years and has decided that it is not a good idea. Limbo was never official doctrine. Jesus said, "Go into all the world and preach the gospel to the whole creation. He who believes and is baptized will be saved." (Mark 16:15-16) For centuries, people have wondered about children who died before they were baptized. The Bible does not explicitly state that they will go to heaven. Limbo was suggested as the place where unbaptized babies went when they died. This idea was never official Church doctrine and has been rejected. The Church now says that it is not sure what happens to unbaptized babies when they die but she entrusts them to the mercy of God. For more information, see the Catechism of the Catholic Chruch section 1261: http://www.usccb.org/catechism/text/pt2sect2.htm#1261 With love in Christ.
  • ...Nowhere. It doesnt exist. the catholic church adopted it from the pagens... Nowhere does it state purgatory/limbo...anywhere. They just think "purged in fire"...means it...even though its like pulled WAY OUT OF CONTEXT
  • it's nowhere because it was made up by the mid-evel catholic church, and it's based on bad theology.

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