This view was adopted as valid by current Auxiliary Bishop of Los Angeles, Robert Barron. On YouTube comments section I made several arguments (over a few years), most of the time he seems to ignore or dismiss my arguments, or misunderstand what I am disagreeing with. He does seem to be eager to address people making absurd arguments against him.
I must say, Michael Voris, a person whose tactics, speech and so on I completely cannot stand, made a video in which he attempts to rebuke Bishop Barron, however, despite tossing around their various degrees, did an awful job of making their argument.
Recently, I came across a priest's article that pointed out this excellent reference found in the Council of Trent that states not everyone will benefit from the Passion of Christ:
But, though He died for all, yet do not all receive the benefit of His death, but those only unto whom the merit of His passion is communicated...--Council of Trent, Session VI, Chapter 3: Who are justified through ChristNow, had Trent wanted to leave universalism as possibility it could have omitted "yet do not all receive the benefit of His death." Which could imply that maybe everyone can receive the benefit of His death. Here is the back and forth I had in the comments section with the Bishop Barron (or whoever responds with his account):
Me: Dogmatically, a Catholic cannot believe universalism at all, even as just a "reasonable hope." The council of Trent on its Decree on Justification plainly states not everyone will benefit from His death: But, though He died for all, yet do not all receive the benefit of His death, but those only unto whom the merit of His passion is communicated.--Council of Trent, Session 6, Chapter 3
Bishop Barron: Not so. That language is conditional.
Me: What is the conditional language if it reads "not all receive the benefit of His death"? Had the council said instead, "only unto those whom the merit of His passion is communicated receive the benefit of His death" might there be still a possibility for universalism being true ultimately because hypothetically all could have had the "merit of His passion...communicated", but the council explicitly added "not all receive the benefit of His death" which removes the possibility for all humans being saved on That Day.
Furthermore, Popes Pius X and Benedict XIV took it as a given that there will be many Catholics entering Hellfire:
"And so Our Predecessor, Benedict XIV, had
just cause to write: 'We declare that a great number of those who are
condemned to eternal punishment suffer that everlasting calamity because of ignorance of those mysteries of faith which must be known
and believed in order to be numbered among the elect'"—Pope St. Pius X, Acerbo
Nimis #3, citing Benedict XIV, Instit.,
27:18
Pope Pius IX in his Syllabus of Errors condemned the proposition:
17. Good hope at least is to be entertained of the eternal salvation of all those who are not at all in the true Church of Christ. --Pope Pius IX, The Syllabus of Errors, Error 17 1864Is "good hope" much different than "reasonable hope"?
As I point out in my older article, Pope John Paul II (now St) actually rejected von Balthasar's idea, and even mentions von Balthasar by name
"The problem of hell has always disturbed great thinkers in the Church, beginning with Origen and continuing in our time with Sergey Bulgakov and Hans Urs von Balthasar. In point of fact, the ancient councils rejected the theory of the "final apocatastasis," according to which the world would be regenerated after destruction, and every creature would be saved; a theory which indirectly abolished hell. But the problem remains. Can God, who has loved man so much, permit the man who rejects Him to be condemned to eternal torment? And yet, the words of Christ are unequivocal. In Matthew's Gospel He speaks clearly of those who will go to eternal punishment (cf. Mt 25:46). Who will these be? The Church has never made any pronouncement in this regard. This is a mystery, truly inscrutable, which embraces the holiness of God and the conscience of man. The silence of the Church is, therefore, the only appropriate position for Christian faith. Even when Jesus says of Judas, the traitor, "It would be better for that man if he had never been born" (Mt 26:24), His words do not allude for certain to eternal damnation.).”—Pope John Paul II, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, Chapter 28: Does Eternal Life Exist? c.AD 1994 (emphasis mine)However, Pope John Paul II in his spoken General Audience, July 28, 1999 made a statement that some interpret as him accepting von Balthasar's theory as being with in orthodoxy, in the original form he said:
“La dannazione rimane una reale possibilità, ma non ci
è dato di conoscere, senza speciale rivelazione divina, se e quali
esseri umani vi siano effettivamente coinvolti.”—Papa Giovanni Paolo II, Udienza
Generale, 28 luglio 1999 (Original text)
“Eternal
damnation remains a real possibility, but we are not granted, without special
divine revelation, the knowledge of whether or which human beings
are effectively involved in it.” --Pope John Paul II, General
Audience, July 28, 1999 (Original text)
However, what is frequently omitted in this assertion is that this text was edited by the Vatican soon after it was published (though it stayed a while in English and Italian), in fact, any trace of it has been removed from the official Vatican.va text. Now, it reads
La dannazione rimane una reale possibilità, ma non ci è dato di conoscere, senza speciale rivelazione divina, quali esseri umani vi siano effettivamente coinvolti. Papa Giovanni Paolo II, Udienza Generale, 28 luglio 1999. Present edit made during John Paul II's papacy (notice the omission of the original "if"/"whether" that is "se e")
Damnation remains a real possibility, but it is not granted to us, without special divine revelation, to know which human beings are effectively involved in it..”—Pope John Paul II, General Audience, July 28, 1999 (revised, edited translation now used on Vatican.va, changed sometime between 2007 and 2018)In other translations, the correction was a lot swifter, they did not get changed recently like the English translation, notice they only say "which" and not "whether/if"
Spanish:“La condenación sigue siendo una posibilidad
real, pero no nos es dado conocer, sin especial revelación divina, cuáles [which plural] seres humanos [human beings] han quedado implicados
efectivamente en ella.”
French:“La
damnation demeure une possibilité réelle, mais il ne nous est pas donné de
connaître, sans révélation divine particulière, quells [which plural] êtres humains [human beings] sont
effectivement concernés.”
Portugese:“A perdição continua uma real possibilidade,
mas não nos é dado conhecer, sem especial revelação divina, quais [which plural] os seres humanos [the human beings] que nela estão efectivamente envolvidos.”
German:”Die
Verdammnis bleibt eine wirkliche Möglichkeit. Aber uns ist es nicht bestimmt,
sie zu kennen, ohne besondere göttliche Offenbarung, welche menschlichen
Wesen wirklich darin verwickelt sind.”
So, it is evident that since the change to the text was done during St John Paul II's papacy, implies that he and the Vatican wanted to avoid any implication that the Pope might suggest universalism is possible.
Likewise, just before his ascent to the Papacy, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) stated, defending the language of "pro multis":
“This is why God’s all-embracing desire to save
people does not involve the actual salvation of all men. He allows us the power to refuse.”— Joseph
Alois Cardinal Ratzinger, “Gott ist uns nah. Eucharistie: Mitt des
Lebens” (God is Near Us: The Eucharist, The Heart of Life), Chapter II: God’s
Yes and His Love Are Maintained Even in Death, point 2, p. 37 (concerning pro
multis in the Mass.) Published June 1, AD 2003
This is consistent with Trent's statement and Crossing the Threshold of Hope.
Another critic of von Balthasar that's the point of the possibility of an empty Hell was discussed by the council and the Council found no need to make it clear since it was already seen as being clearly taught in Scripture itself:
“In reference to the text
from Vatican II it is to be noted that initially there was no reference to the
"eternal fire." The reference was explicitly inserted at the request
of many bishops. We know as well, from the official Relatio, that the
text was not intended to speak of the salvation of all men.[45] From the same
source we learned that "one bishop wanted a sentence to be included in
which it would be clear that there are damned defacto, lest damnation
remain as a mere hypothesis." The request was refused by the
Theological Commission responsible for drafting the document, with the comment
that "In no. 48
there are cited the words of the Gospel in which the Lord Himself speaks about
the damned in a form which is grammatically future."[46] The
significance of that remark is that when the Church speaks of damnation of
humans she speaks, as Christ himself did, not in a form of grammar which is conditional
(i.e., speaking about something which might happen), but in the grammatical
future (i.e., about something which will happen). And it was
with this understanding that the bishops of Vatican II voted upon and accepted Lumen Gentium.”—James
T. O'Connor
[46]: Acta Synodalia Sacrosancti Concilii Oecumenici Vaticani II Volumen III, Periodus Tertia, Pars VIII, Congregationes Generales CXXIII-CXXVII, Sessio Publica V, pages 144-145, section 40
Latin text: "Unus Pater volt aliquam sententiam introduci ex qua appareat reprobos de facto haberi (ne damnatio ut mera hypothesis maneat).
English: One father wanted a sentence to be introduced from which it would be clear that there are damned defacto, lest damnation remain as a mere hypothesis.
Propositum non quadrat cum hoc contextu. Ceterum in n. 48 Schematis citantur verba evangelica quibus Dominus ipse in forma grammaticaliter futura de reprobis loquitur.
English: The proposal does not square with this context. In no. 48 there are cited the words of the Gospel in which the Lord Himself speaks about the damned in a form which is grammatically future.
[46]: Acta Synodalia Sacrosancti Concilii Oecumenici Vaticani II Volumen III, Periodus Tertia, Pars VIII, Congregationes Generales CXXIII-CXXVII, Sessio Publica V, pages 144-145, section 40
Latin text: "Unus Pater volt aliquam sententiam introduci ex qua appareat reprobos de facto haberi (ne damnatio ut mera hypothesis maneat).
English: One father wanted a sentence to be introduced from which it would be clear that there are damned defacto, lest damnation remain as a mere hypothesis.
Propositum non quadrat cum hoc contextu. Ceterum in n. 48 Schematis citantur verba evangelica quibus Dominus ipse in forma grammaticaliter futura de reprobis loquitur.
English: The proposal does not square with this context. In no. 48 there are cited the words of the Gospel in which the Lord Himself speaks about the damned in a form which is grammatically future.
In fact, the Catechism states:
"The affirmations of Sacred
Scripture and the teachings of the Church on the subject of hell are a call to
the responsibility incumbent upon man to make use of his freedom in view of his
eternal destiny. They are at the same time an urgent call to conversion: "Enter
by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is easy, that leads to
destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the
way is hard, that leads to life, and those who find it are few.""—Catechism
§1036 on Hell (notice it quotes Luke 13:24 and interprets it as being
Hell)
The Catechism, quoting Scripture states that the gate of destruction is entered "are many." If Christ said "many" enter by the wide gate of destruction, then how can we say potentially "no one" might actually enter the wide gate.
On October 22, 2017, I personally met a member of the Roman Curia in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (granted he was not the head of it) on the issue of von Balthasar's theory which I mentioned by name, and he plainly stated the theory was ridiculous, and the idea that Hell is presently unpopulated is absurd. He said he could go on for hours on how wrong von Balthasar's theory was. He was shocked to know there are clergy, even a bishop that teach his hypothesis of "reasonable hope." My friend made a comment on a popular Catholic celebrity's Facebook referencing my inquiry to the member of the CDF, to which a person writing under the Facebook profile of Bishop Barron dismissed my discussion with the member of the CDF as "an appeal to authority." Here is a screen shot of the discussion with the names of peoples and places omitted.
I should also mention a few noteworthy American theologians (though they are not technically authorities) like the Servant of God, Fr John A. Hardon, SJ was very critical of Von Balthasar's theory.
Here are a list of verses in Sacred Scripture that teach Hell will not be empty of humans on The Day:
"How narrow the gate and constricted the road that leads to life. And those who find it are few."--Matthew 7:14
“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven. Many will say to me on that day: ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name? Did we not drive out demons in your name? Did we not do mighty deeds in your name?’ Then I will declare to them solemnly, ‘I never knew you. Depart from me, you evildoers.’--Matthew 7:21-23
“Many are invited, but few
are chosen."—Matthew 22:14
“I
say to you, many will come from the east and the west, and will recline with
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob at the banquet in the kingdom of heaven, but the
children of the kingdom will be driven out into the outer darkness,
where there will be wailing and grinding of teeth."—Matthew 8:11-2
"Strive to enter through the narrow gate, for many, I tell you, will attempt to enter but will not be strong enough.”—Luke 13:24
“Next
I saw a large white throne and the one who was sitting on it. The earth and the
sky fled from his presence and there was no place for them. I saw the dead, the
great and the lowly, standing before the throne, and scrolls were opened. Then
another scroll was opened, the book of life. The dead were judged according to
their deeds, by what was written in the scrolls. The sea gave up its dead; then
Death and Hades gave up their dead. All the dead were judged according to their
deeds. Then Death and Hades were thrown into the pool of fire. (This pool of
fire is the second death.) Anyone whose
name was not found written in the book of life was thrown into the pool of fire.”—Revelation
20:11-15
"Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake; some shall live forever, others shall be an everlasting horror and disgrace."—Daniel 12:2
“For the LORD shall judge all mankind by fire and sword. and many shall be slain by the LORD.”—Isaiah 66:16
Example of early extra biblical writings, Church Fathers and doctors:
‘Let us beware lest we be found [fulfilling that
saying], as it is written, "Many are called, but few
are chosen. "’—Epistle of Barnabas Chapter 4
“But I shall ask you one thing, O child: that impious
Herod, where is he? The child says to him: Since you have asked, hear his
dwelling-place. He dwells, indeed, in Hades; and there has been prepared
for him fire unquenchable, Gehenna without end, bubbling
mire, worm that sleeps not, because he cut off three thousand infants, wishing
to slay the child Jesus, the ancient of the ages; but of all these ages I am
father.”—Acts and Martyrdom
of St Matthew
“His works that He had come as the Savior, not the
Judge of the world. But the wicked traitor refused to understand this, and took
measures against himself, not in the self-condemnation of repentance, but in
the madness of perdition, and thus he who had sold the Author of life to His
murderers, even in dying increased the amount of sin which condemned him.”—St
Leo Sermon 62:4
“He was it
is true but one man "who had not the wedding garment.
Cast him out." But why is he cast out? "For
many are called, but few chosen. "
Leave alone the few, cast out the many. It is true, that man
was but one. Yet undoubtedly that one not only was many, but those many
in numbers far surpassed the number of the good…[continues on the few
saved]”—St Augustine Homily 40:4 On the New
Testament
The "way of the ungodly"
is but a transitory happiness; at the end of the way the happiness is at an end
also. Why? Because that way is "the broad road;
" its termination leads to the pit of hell.
Now, your way is narrow; and "few there
be" that enter in through it: [Matthew 7:13-14]
but into how ample a field it comes at the last, you ought to consider. "Fret
not yourself at him who prospers in his way; because of the man who brings
wicked devices to pass."—St Augustine Exposition of Psalm 37
“Do you not see that it is better to have one
healthy sheep, than ten thousand with the murrain; that fine children, though
few, are better than many children diseased withal; that in the Kingdom
there will be few, but in hell many? What have I to do with a multitude?
what profit therein? None. Rather they are a plague to the rest. It is as if
one who had the option of ten healthy persons or ten thousand sick folks,
should take to himself the latter in addition to the ten.”—St John Chrysostom Homily 8 on Acts
“In our city among so many thousands, scarcely can
one hundred be found who will be saved, for in the youngers is great
wickedness, and in the elders deadness.”--St John Chrysostom Homily 40 to the
Antiochenes
“Judas also repented, but in an evil way.”—St John
Chrysostom Homily 31
“Have you never noticed what He did even in this
world? How when He met with two thieves, He counted them not worthy of the same
estate, but one He led into the Kingdom, and the other He sent away into
Hell?”—St John Chrysostom, Homily 25
"I do not think there are many among Bishops
that will be saved, but many more that perish: and the reason is, that it is an
affair that requires a great mind."--St John Chrysostom Homily 3 on Acts of
the Apostles
"Many, after they have found the way of truth,
caught by the pleasures of the world, desert midway."—St Jerome
"Yet
doubtless there are but few who are saved. You remember a question which was lately
set before us out of the Gospel, "Lord,"
it was said, "are there few that be saved?"
What said the Lord to this? He did not
say, "Not few, but many are they who are saved."
He did not say this. But what said He, when He had heard, "Are
there few that be saved? Strive to enter by the strait gate."
[Luke 13:24] When you hear then, "Are
there few that be saved?" the Lord confirmed what He
heard. Through the "strait gate"
but "few" can "enter."
In another place He says Himself, "Strait and narrow
is the way which leads unto life, and few there be that go thereby: but broad
and spacious is the way that leads to destruction, and many there be which walk
thereby." Why
rejoice we in great numbers? Give ear to me, you "few."
I know that you are "many," who
hear me, yet but "few" of you
hear to obey.”—St Augustine Sermon 61 On The New
Testament
“Consider therefore that you belong to the few and
elect; and do not grow cold after the examples of the lukewarmness of many: but
live as the few, that with the few you may be worthy of a
place in the kingdom of God: for "many are called, but few
chosen," and it is a "little
flock to which it is the Father's good pleasure to give "
an inheritance.”—St John Cassian Institutes 4:38
"There be very many come to the faith, yet
but few arrive at the heavenly kingdom; many follow God in words, but shun
Him in their lives. Whereof spring two things to be thought upon. The first,
that none should presume ought concerning himself; for though he be called to
the faith, he knows not whether he shall be chosen to the kingdom. Secondly,
that none should despair of his neighbor, even though he see him lying in
vices; because he knows not the riches of the Divine mercy."—Pope
Gregory the Great c AD 600
"Omnipotent God wishes all men without
exception to be saved [1 Tim. 2:4]
although not all will be saved. However, that certain ones are saved, is
the gift of the one who saves; that certain ones perish, however, is the
deserved punishment of those who perish."—Council of Quiersy chapter 3, AD
853, (Denz. 318)
"Likewise concerning the redemption of the
blood of Christ, because of the great error which has arisen from this cause,
so that some, as their writings indicate, declare that it has been shed even
for those impious ones who from the beginning of the world even up to the
passion of our Lord, have died in their wickedness and have been punished by
eternal damnation, contrary to that prophet: "O death, I will be Thy
death, O hell, I will be thy bite" [Hosea
13:14]..."--Council of Valence Canon 4, AD 855 (Denz 323)
"There are few who are saved."--St Anselm
c. AD 1100
"That all Christians are to be
saved."[CONDEMNED]—Pope Pius II, 2nd Article condemned in "Cum
Sicut", Nov. 14, 1459 Denz. 717b
"Poor Judas! he has spent more than eighteen
hundred years in hell, and his hell is still at its commencement.
Poor Cain, he is in fire for more than five thousand eight hundred years, and his
hell is at its beginning."—St Alphonsus Ligouri, Doctor of the Church,
Preparation for Death, Consideration XXVII: The
Eternity of Hell, Point III:Eternity is Unchangable, p. 127
"So what must we do, we who know that the
greater number is going to be damned, and not only out of all Catholics? What
must we do? Take the resolution to belong to the little number of those who are
saved."--St. Leonard of Port Maurice AD 1751
In addition, the Catechism of Trent said Judas was damned:
It is such as these that our Saviour describes as hirelings, who, in the
words of Ezechiel, feed themselves and not the sheep, and whose
baseness and dishonesty have not only brought great disgrace on the
ecclesiastical state, so much so that hardly anything is now more vile
and contemptible in the eyes of the faithful, but also end in this, that
they derive no other fruit from their priesthood than was derived by
Judas from the Apostleship, which only brought him everlasting
destruction. --Roman Catechism (Trent), Right Intention