Spiritual High Stakes for Newborns, By Kim Rendfeld

Kim Rendfeld will serve on a panel about midwifery at the 2015 Historical Novel Society Conference, June 26-28, and talk specifically about the practice in early medieval times.

Childbirth was so risky in early medieval times the expectant mother confessed her sins as her time drew near. If her baby was in jeopardy, the fate of the infant’s soul was in the hands of the midwife, who had the authority to baptize.

Christians in this era believed the teaching of Saint Augustine (354-430): an unbaptized infant, even one who died in the womb, would spend eternity with the damned but receive the lightest of punishments. Saint Augustine admitted these children had done nothing wrong, but he contended they still bore Adam’s original sin, which only baptism could remove.

childbirthAs if losing a baby was not tragic enough. Now the great hope of the parents’ faith—that they would see their loved ones in the afterlife—could be crushed. Contrary to a common misconception, medieval parents were attached to their infant children. Just read the epitaph for Charlemagne’s 40-day-old daughter: “Dear little maiden, you leave no little grief/Stabbing your father’s heart with a dagger.”

Apparently, theologians in later centuries thought Saint Augustine was too harsh. In the 12th century, they argued that infants wouldn’t feel physical pain but would mourn the loss of being outside God’s presence. In the 13th century, Church schools adopted Saint Thomas Aquinas’s argument for limbo, where unbaptized infants would be happy, unaware of their loss, but still wouldn’t go to heaven.

Thomas Aquinas’s ideas were close to those of early Church fathers, who believed that infants would not go to heaven or hell. They saw original sin more as an inclination toward evil rather than guilt for a specific wrongdoing.

Aquinas’s ideas were further refined in the 15th century, when writers added that infants in limbo would receive bodies during the Resurrection and happily spend eternity in the New Earth.

Still, I can imagine that if there was any sign of life, even a faint one, a midwife would splash water on the child and say the prayer, or something that passed for Latin, and hope the newborn would spend eternity in paradise.

Postscript: Roman Catholic teachings have moderated in recent years. Catechisms have not included references to limbo since 1992. In 2007, a theological commission went further: “The conclusion of this study is that there are theological and liturgical reasons to hope that infants who die without baptism may be saved and brought into eternal happiness, even if there is not an explicit teaching on this question found in Revelation.”

Sources

“Limbo” by Patrick Toner. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 9, 1910. [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09256a.htm]

Saint Augustine’s On Merit and the Forgiveness of Sins, and the Baptism of Infants (Book I) [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/15011.htm ]
“Vatican revises limbo view, hope for unbaptized babies,” USA Today, April 22, 2007 [http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/religion/2007-04-20-popelimbo_N.htm]

“The Hope of Salvation for Infants Who Die without Being Baptised,” International Theological Commission [http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/cti_documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20070419_un-baptised-infants_en.html]

Kim Rendfeld

Kim Rendfeld will serve on a panel about midwifery at the 2015 Historical Novel Society Conference, June 26-28, and talk specifically about the practice in early medieval times. She has written two novels set in eighth century Francia: The Cross and the Dragon, (2012, Fireship Press), a story of a noblewoman contending with a jilted suitor and the premonition she will lose her husband in battle, and The Ashes of Heaven’s Pillar, (2014, Fireship Press), a tale of a mother who will go to great lengths to protect her children after she has lost everything else. To read the first chapters of Kim’s published novels or learn more about her, visit kimrendfeld.com or her blog Outtakes of a Historical Novelist at kimrendfeld.wordpress.com. You can also like her on Facebook at facebook.com/authorkimrendfeld, follow her on Twitter at @kimrendfeld, or contact her at kim [at] kimrendfeld [dot] com.