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Title: Will%20Infants%20Who%20Die%20Go%20to%20Heaven?


1
Will Infants Who Die Go to Heaven?
  • An Overview of the Claims, Options, Possible
    Solutions, Implications, and Concluding
    Biblically Theologically Coherent Support for
    the Doctrine of Infant Salvation.
  • Material adapted from Robert P. Lightners, The
    Death Christ Died (Grand Rapids Kregel, 1998)
    Norman L. Geislers Bakers Encyclopedia of
    Christian Apologetics (Grand Rapids Baker,
    1999) Earl Radmachers Salvation (Nashville
    Word, 2000) W.H. Griffith Thomas, Principles of
    Theology (London Church Book Room, 1951).

2
Infant Salvation
  • I. Is infant salvation justified from
    Scripture?
  • II. 10 Views on Infant Salvation.
  • III. Possible Solutions and Implications.
  • IV. Conclusion.
  • V. Appendix Heathen Salvation

3
I. Is Infant Salvation Justified from Scripture?
  • Since there is no absolutely clear exegetical
    proof that firmly presents infant salvation, is
    there warranted theological proof from Scripture
    that correlates with biblical, systematic
    theology, or is our justification, as
    well-intentioned as it may be
  • Psychological (e.g., comforting, feelings)?
  • Religious (e.g., tradition, erroneous
    interpretation, pastor/priest, statements that
    minister, etc)?
  • Sociological (subculture, parents, or friends)?

4
A. Consider the following quotes
  • Undoubtedly, many infants get there heaven by
    death. The high infant mortality in many
    countries of the world now and in past centuries
    suggests that numerous young children are in
    heaven. Jesus statement, however, should not be
    understood as meaning that all children,
    regardless of their age, are members of Gods
    kingdom. Other children, who live several years
    beyond infancy and then receive Christ as their
    Savior (receiving the kingdom as a child Mark
    1015 Luke 1817), go to heaven when they die.
    Having been regenerated by their faith in Christ,
    they obviously belong to the kingdom of God (John
    33). They are among those little ones who
    believe in me, as Jesus said (Matt. 186).
  • Dr. Earl Radmacher, Salvation, 229.

5
  • John Newton, the hymn writer of Amazing Grace,
    wrote that the number of infants in heaven
  • so greatly exceeds the aggregate of adult
    believers that, comparatively speaking, the
    kingdom may be said to consists of little
    children. The apostle speaks of them as not
    having, sinned after the similitude of Adams
    transgression Rom. 514, that is, with the
    consent of their understanding and will. And
    when he says, We must all appear before the
    judgment seat of Christ, he adds, that every
    man may give an account of what he has done in
    the body, whether it be good or bad 2 Cor.
    510. But children who die in their infancy
    have not done anything in the body, either good
    or bad.

6
  • It is true they are by nature evil, and must if
    saved, be the subjects of a supernatural change.
    And though we cannot conceive how this change is
    to be wrought, yet I suppose few are so rash as
    to imagine it impossible that any infants can be
    saved. The same power that produces change in
    some, can produce it in all and therefore I am
    willing to believe, till the Scripture forbids
    me, that infants, of all nations and kindreds,
    without exception, who die before they are
    capable of sinning after the similitude of Adams
    transgression, who have done nothing in the body
    of which they can give an account, are included
    in the election of grace.
  • The Works of John Newton, 3 rd., 6 vols, 4552-3.

7
  • Charles Spurgeon once wrote
  • I rejoice to know that the souls of all
    infants, as soon as they die, speed their way to
    paradise. Think what a multitude there is of
    them!
  • Charles H. Spurgeon, Spurgeon at His Best, 95.

8
  • Dr. Norman Geisler writes
  • Many critics have impugned the justice of God
    because of the status of the unborn. Belief is
    considered necessary condition for salvation
    (John 318-19 Acts 1631), and yet innocent
    young children have not yet reached the age at
    which they can believe. But it seems eminently
    unjust to condemn innocent infants who have not
    yet committed a sin nor are even old enough to
    believe and be saved. Christians have struggled
    with the issue of the eternal status of infants.
    Yet nowhere does the Bible directly treat the
    issue. Hence, we are left to arguments based on
    general principle and inference from Scripture.
  • Bakers Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics,
    360.
  • .

9
  • Dr. Robert P. Lightner writes
  • Not once in all the references to infants is
    there os much as a hint that they will ever be
    damned to eternal perdition after death. In many
    contexts where the words are used we would not
    expect a statement about their eternal destiny.
    Yet there are instances, such as when God ordered
    the destruction of all the Amalekites, including
    infants (1 Sam. 153), when it would have been
    appropriate to speak of their damnation. But not
    once, even when reference is made to the death of
    children, is there so much as a hint that any
    would suffer eternal separation from God (see for
    example Ex. 1229-30 and Matt. 216).
  • Sin, Savior, and Salvation, 184.
  • .

10
  • The idea of meeting his child in the
    unconscious grave could not have rationally
    comforted him nor could the thought of meeting
    him in hell have cheered his spirit but the
    thought of meeting him in heaven had in itself
    the power of turning his weeping into joy.
  • R. A. Webb, The Theology of Infant Salvation,
    20-21.

11
  • R.C. Sproul, who criticized Billy Graham for
    saying in the memorial service of the more than
    one hundred people, including a number of young
    children, who died in the bombing of the federal
    building in Oklahoma City in 1995, that the
    innocent children who died in the bombing are in
    Gods arms in heaven, by writing that all of
    those who died without receiving Christ as
    Savior, whether adults or children
  • are experiencinganguish and torment in hell.
    However, he did admit, though, that we cannot
    say for sure what happens to young children who
    die.
  • R.C. Sproul, Jr., Comfort Ye My People,
    World, May 6, 1995, 26.

12
  • Pelagius, who reacted against Augustines view
    that since children are born within the fall,
    infants inherit real depravity, so that the wrath
    of God abides on unbaptized babies, stated
  • Where they are not, I know where they are, I
    know not John Sanders, No Other Name, 292.
  • Pelagius later embraced limbo position.

13
B. Consider the following passages
  • When the newborn baby of David and Bathsheba
    became ill, David prayed and fasted for his
    healing, lying in anguish on the ground in each
    night. But a week after the baby became sick, he
    died (2 Sam. 1215-18). Then David told his
    servants, I will go to him, but he will not
    return to me (1223).
  • Was David referring only to his own death?
  • Was David referring to being in conscious
    fellowship with his son after death?
  • Is there any comfort in Davids saying he would
    die too?

14
B. Consider the following passages
  • The kingdom of heaven or of God belongs to
    such as these (Matt. 1914 Mark 1014 Luke
    1816). The context indicates that adults who
    are like children in acknowledging their lowly
    and helpless condition will enter Gods kingdom.
  • Does this Greek word, toiaute (of such as
    these) indicate that children too are in Gods
    kingdom?
  • How does this compare to Luke 1815-17? As Luke
    wrote, does this passage include infants?

15
B. Consider the following passages
  • Your Father in heaven is not willing that any of
    these little ones should be lost (Matt. 1814).
  • If contextually Christ sets before the disciples
    as patterns for imitation, will these children
    perish?
  • What does the word lost or perish mean and
    how does this word relate to the context?

16
II. By what means will deceased infants go to
heaven?10 Views of Infant Salvation

17
10 Views of Infant Salvation are
  1. Universalism
  2. Born without Sin
  3. Second Chance View
  4. All Infants are Elect View
  5. Infants of Saved Parents are the Elect View
  6. Infant Regeneration View
  7. Redemptive Work of Christ View
  8. Infant Water Baptism View
  9. Catholic Limbo View
  10. Foreknowledge View

18
1 Universalism
  • All children who die as infants are taken to
    heaven because of the doctrine of universalism.
    That is, since everyone will ultimately be saved
    and no one will be in hell, infants will
    naturally be in heaven, even though they had no
    opportunity to believe.
  • Critique direct opposition to Scripture that
    affirms the eternal damnation of the unsaved
    (e.g., Matt. 2546 John 316, 18 336 Rev.
    2015). And yet this is not to deny the heavenly
    home of dead infants. It simply means that
    universalism is not the basis of their salvation.

19
2 Born Without Sin
  • There is a heavenly destiny for infants because
    they are born without sin. As Clifford Ingle, a
    Southern Baptist seminary professor writes.
  • a child does not inherit lostness from Adam
    he chooses it. All persons, Ingle writes
  • are born with a tendency toward sin all are
    destined to sin. However, this individual is not
    responsible for the sins of the human race or
    his inherited nature. He becomes an actual
    sinner in the eyes of God when, as a morally
    responsible person, he chooses sin and rebels
    against God. Thus there is a time between birth
    and moral accountability when the child is not
    guilty for sin.
  • Moving in the Right Direction, in Children
    and Conversion, ed. Clifford Ingle (Nashville
    Broadman Press, 1970), 153-54.

20
2 Born Without Sin
  • John Inchley believes that children are not in
    a state of being lost from God, and that until
    they deliberately refuse Christ, they belong to
    him.
  • John Inchly, Kids and the Kingdom (Wheaton
    Tyndale House, 1976), 14, 33.
  • Marlin Jeshke writes, to place the human race
    into only two classes, the saved and lost. We
    are required to recognize also a third class, the
    innocent.
  • Believers Baptism for Children of the Church
    (Scottsdale, Penn. Herald Press, 1983), 104.

21
2 Born Without Sin
  • Critique
  • This view that children are born innocent and
    without an inherited sin nature is in direct
    conflict with Scripture For both adults and
    infants, and all who cant believer, are still
    under the curse of Adams sin
  • 1. In Adam all die (1 Cor 1522).
  • 2. God told Noah after the flood that he would
    bring about another flood of that magnitude
    event though every inclination of mans heart
    is evil from childhood (Gen. 821).
  • 3. Solomon wrote, Folly is bound up in the
    heart of a child (Prov. 2215).
  • 4. David said he was born sinful at birth (Ps.
    515), and that even birth the wicked go
    astray (Ps. 583).
  • 5. Paul affirmed, There is no one righteous,
    not even one (Rom. 310).
  • 6. All are under sin (39) and under Gods
    wrath (John 336) and that includes children.

22
2 Born Without Sin
  • Everyone is born with a sin nature, from Adam,
    because all humanity in Adam sinned as clearly
    stated in Romans 512.
  • Adam sin plunged the entire human race into a
    stance of guilt before God, because all sinned
    in Adam (whether federal or seminal).
  • Therefore, people sin because they are sinners
    it is not that they become sinners by sinning.

23
2 Born Without Sin
  • Therefore, in light of passages like Rom. 323
    and Rom. 512
  • 1. all infants come with a sin nature, they
    are all lost and condemned.
  • 2. To say infants are neutral or innocent
    with respect to sin, and that they are not
    sinners until they knowingly commit acts of
    sin, overlooks the universal passages
    regarding the intrinsic sinfulness of humanity
    in both O.T. and N.T.
  • A theology of childhood salvation must be some
    reason with the point that all people, including
    children are sinful and in need of redemption.
    Perry G. Downs, Child Evangelization, Journal
    of Christian Education 3 (1983) 10.

24
3 Second Chance View
  • When infants die they immediately mature and are
    then provided an opportunity to receive the gift
    of salvation in Christ
  • 1. First proposed by Gregory of Nyssa, 4th
    Century, builds this view on the conviction that
    faith is necessary for salvation. It has also
    found support among those in the Catholic Church.
    See George J. Dyer, The Unbaptized Infant in
    Eternity, Chicago Studies 2 (1963) 147 John
    Sanders, No Other Name (Grand Rapids Eerdmans,
    1992), 289.
  • 2. Somewhat related, Oliver Buswell suggests
    that immediately before death the intelligence of
    the infant is enlarged so that the child can
    accept Christ as Savior A Systematic Theology of
    the Christian Religion, 2 vols (Grand Rapids
    Zondervan, 1963), 2 162.

25
3 Second Chance View
  • When infants die they immediately mature and are
    then provided an opportunity to receive the gift
    of salvation in Christ
  • Critique
  • 1. No biblical support.
  • 2. If infants immediately before or after death
    are given the opportunity to be saved, this
    implies that some will go to heaven and others
    will not.
  • 3. If this enablement to believe occurs after
    death, then where is the child while he is
    confronted with the claims of Christ?
  • 4. This view wrongly suggests a neutral state
    after death, before ones final destiny in
    heaven or hell.

26
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • All infants who die will be in heaven because
    they are elected by God.
  • 1. Ulrich Zwingli asserted that all children of
    believing parents are among the elect, and
    therefore, will be saved, and that probably
    dying infants of non-Christian parents are also
    among the elect.
  • 2. Charles Hodge based the belief that all who
    die in Infancy are saved on Romans 518-19

27
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • B. B. Warfield
  • 1. He defends this view by pointing out that for
    infants Gods electing grace supersedes their
    inborn sin nature because God has chosen them.
    See The Development of the Doctrine of Infant
    Salvation, in Studies in Theology (New York
    Oxford University Press, 1932), 438.
  • 2. Westminster Confession says, Elect infants,
    dying in infancy, are regenerated and saved by
    Christ through the Spirit Chap. 10, sec. 3.
  • This statement does not explicitly affirm that
    all dying infants are elect since the words
    elect infants leave the question open.
    However, many Presbyterians affirm that all
    infants who die are in fact included among the
    elect. See Thomas Smyth, Opinions on Infant
    Salvation, in Children in Heaven, 34 Roger
    Nicole, cited by Ronald H. Nash, in What about
    Those Who Have Never Heard? Ed. John Sanders
    (Downers Grove, Ill InterVarsity Press, 1995),
    119-20.

28
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Romans 518-19
  • Consequently, just as the result of one
    trespass was condemnation for all men, so also
    the result of one act of righteousness was
    justification that brings life for all men. For
    just as through the disobedience of the one man
    the many were made sinners, so also through the
    obedience of the one man the many will be made
    righteous.
  • Hodge also cites Rom. 520, But where sin
    increased, grace increased all the more.

29
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Critique
  • 1. How does election reconcile original sin,
    freedom from guilt, or personal rebellion? The
    election view does not really solve the problems
    of sin, freedom from guilt, and rebellion
    against God.
  • a. Infants come into this world with results of
    Adams sin in them.
  • b. Infants are involved in the inherent sin of
    the race whether in terms of federal or
    seminal.

30
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Critique
  • 1. Debasing Effects of Sin (Rom. 121-32).
  • 2. Judicial Effects of Sin (Rom. 512-21).
  • 3. Corrupting Effects of Sin (Rom. 310-18 Eph.
    21-3).
  • 4. Deceiving Effects of Sin (Jer. 179).
  • 5. Debilitating Effects of Sin (Jer. 179).
  • 6. Blinding Effects of Sin (2 Cor. 44).

31
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Critique
  • 3 . This view minimizes the necessity of faith
    because
  • a. Claims that Christs salvation is not
    potential but actual for infants.
  • b. Sin of infants are imputed to Christ.
  • As Lewis S. Chafer observes, The word whosoever
    is used at least 110 times in the New Testament,
    and always with the unrestricted meaning
    Systematic Theology, 278.

32
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Critique
  • 4. The best foundation for reconciling total
    depravity, the necessity of faith for salvation,
    an election is to believe in the unlimited of
    Christ rather than the election view for infants
  • A. It accounts for total depravity and
    election.
  • B. It allows the necessity of faith to be
    exempted on the basis of unlimited
    atonement but not for those who are
    consciously aware of their sin and need to
    receive Jesus Christ as personal Savior.
  • C. It accounts for passages that explicitly
    declare unlimited atonement

33
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Case for Unlimited Atonement is both negatively
    and positively affirmed in Scripture
  • Negatively, nowhere in Scripture does it ever
    say that Christ did not die for all people
  • Positively we passages that imply if not declare
    the extent of the atonement such as
  • John 129 Behold the Lamb of God,
    which takes away the sins of the world.
  • John 316 For God so loved the world.
  • John 317 For God sent not his Son into the
    world to condemn the world, but that the world
    through him might be saved.

34
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • John 442 This is indeed the Christ, the
    Saviour of the world
  • 2 Cor. 519 To wit, that God was in Christ,
    reconciling the world unto himself.
  • 1 John 414 .the Father sent the Son to be
    the Savior of the world.
  • John 316 That whosoever believes in Him
    should not perish, but have everlasting life.
  • 1 Tim. 26 Who gave Himself a ransom for
    all, to be testified in due time.

35
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Acts 221 Whososever shall call on the name
    of the Lord shall be saved.
  • Acts 1043 Through his name whosoever believes
    in Him shall receive remission of sins.
  • Romans 1013 For whosoever shall call upon the
    name of the Lord shall be saved.
  • Revelation 2217 And whosoever will, let him
    take the water of life freely.
  • Romans 56 ...Christ died for the ungodly.

36
4 All Infants are the Elect View
  • Critique
  • As W.H. Griffith Thomas, co-founder of Dallas
    Theological Seminary, writes
  • So that we can say of infants, By the
    righteousness of One the free gift came upon all
    men to justification by Him. We must not forget
    that infants come into a world of grace as well
    of sin, and the two parallel lines can never be
    overlooked. While there is, of course, no
    definite declaration in regard to the salvation
    of infants dying in infancy, all that we can
    infer from Scripture supports the view that they
    are saved on the ground of the Atonement of
    Christ, and this because although they were born
    in sin they were not actual transgressors of the
    Divine Law Principles of Theology, 506.

37
5 Infants of Saved Parents are the Elect.
  • Related to the last view is that the infants of
    saved (or elect)
  • parents are saved.
  • Canon of Dort godly parents ought not to doubt
    the election and salvation of their children whom
    it pleased God to call out of this life in their
    infancy (art. 17).
  • Observations
  • 1. There is no biblical support.
  • 2. Does not account for sin or guilt problem.
  • 3. Offers no hope for parents who are unsaved.
  • 4. Does not harmonize with passages that teach
    unlimited atonement.
  • 4. Does not reconcile with passages such as 2
    Peter 39 cf. 1 Tim. 24.
  • If God really desires all to be saved, and it
    is possible to save some infants from their
    personal faith, then why does he not elect all of
    them to salvation?
  • 5. Problem of Gods unmerciful and/or unjust in
    not choosing to save all.

38
5 Infants of Saved Parents are the Elect.
  • Observations
  • 1. There is no clear biblical support.
  • 2. Does not account for sin or guilt problem.
  • 3. Offers no hope for parents who are unsaved.
  • 4. Does not harmonize with passages that teach
    unlimited atonement.
  • 4. Does not reconcile with passages such as 2
    Peter 39 cf. 1Tim. 24.
  • If God really desires all to be saved, and it
    is possible to save some infants from their
    personal faith, then why does he not elect all of
    them to salvation?
  • 5. Problem of Gods unmerciful and/or unjust in
    not choosing to save all when He is able to do
    so. In other words, while there is nothing in
    fallen humans that merit salvation, there is
    something in an all- loving God that prompts Him
    to save all, namely, His infinite love (John
    316 Rom. 56-8 1 Tim. 24).

39
5 Infants saved by the Baptism of Desire View
  • Infants can be saved by the baptism of desire,
    that is, if they desired baptism but were unable
    to obtain it before they died, they would go to
    heaven.
  • 1. This view held in 9th Century by Hincmar of
    Rheims. See Warfield, Studies in Theology, 415.
  • 2. Martin Luther applied the idea of baptism of
    desire to Christi parents, saving that their
    desire for their childrens baptism, even if not
    carried out, guarantees their offsprings
    salvation.

40
5 Infants saved by the Baptism of Desire View
  • Critique
  • 1. It is not biblical.
  • 2. How can an infant desire baptism?
  • 3. How does a parents mere desire substitute
    for a childs salvation?
  • 4. This view does not address the question of
    infants of unsaved parents, who may not desire
    salvation for their young or may know nothing of
    salvation and baptism. This implies that
    salvation for those infants are not available
    and that they are lost forever.

41
6 Infant Regeneration View
  • All infants who die will be regenerated because
    they have not willfully rejected Jesus Christ
  • 1. Only those who consciously reject Christ are
    condemned to hell.
  • 2. Infants cannot knowingly turn from Christ.
  • 3. Therefore, all dying infants will be in
    heaven, event though they are born sinners and
    do not exercise faith.
  • See Neal Punt, Whats Good about the Good News?
    (Chicago Northland, 1988), chap. 11.

42
6 Infant Regeneration View
  • All infants who die will be regenerated because
    they have not willfully rejected Jesus Christ
  • Critique
  • 1. It makes eternal damnation dependent on a
    willful refusal to believe in Jesus Christ.
  • a. If that is the basis of divine judgment in
    hell, how can those who never heard of
    Christ be condemned.
  • 2. The basis of condemnation is not rejection of
    Christ, but ones inherited sin nature. In
    Adam all die (1 Cor. 1522 cf. Rom. 512).
  • 3. Paul reasoned in Rom. 1 that all are under
    guilt of sin and the wrath of God because of
    their sin. Therefore, only Gods grace can
    atone for the sin of infants.

43
6 Infant Regeneration View
  • As Dr. Robert Lightner states
  • Total depravity means that man possesses
    nothing nor can he do anything to merit favor
    before God. Scripture is abundantly clear on
    this point. According to the Word of God, this
    condition affects not only every man but also
    every part of every man (Rom. 1-3). All unsaved
    men are viewed by God as lost (Luke 1910),
    condemned(John 318), under the wrath of God
    (John 336), dead in trespasses and sins (Eph.
    21-2) and as possessing a heart that is
    desperately wicked (Jer. 179) The Death
    Christ Died A Biblical Case for Unlimited
    Atonement (Grand Rapids Kregel, 1998), 38.
  • 3. Paul reasoned in Rom. 1 that all are under
    guilt of sin and the wrath of God because of
    their sin. Therefore, only Gods grace can atone
    for the sin of infants.

44
7 Redemptive Work of Christ View
  • All infants enjoy heavenly bliss because of the
    redemptive work of Christ on the cross
  • 1. Like everyone, infants need salvation and
    salvation is only through Christ.
  • 2. Therefore, even though infants others who
    cant believe, ie., severely mentally
    handicapped cannot exercise faith in Him, He
    can remove their depravity.
  • The great atoning sacrifice of Calvary included
    unconscious childhood as well as conscious
    manhood and womanhood in the wondrous efficacy
    and blessing all children are included in the
    great atoning Sacrifice, and really belong to the
    Lord Jesus Christ until they deliberately and
    consciously refuse to Have Him as their personal
    Savior and King.
  • W. H. Griffith Thomas, The Catholic Faith A
    Manual of Instruction for Members of the Church
    of England, rev. ed. (London Church Book Room
    Press, 1952), 110 263.

45
7 Redemptive Work of Christ View
  • All infants enjoy heavenly bliss because of the
    redemptive work of Christ on the cross
  • If they be saved, it must be entirely by the
    sovereign mercy and positive operation of
    God.All redeemed sinners owe their salvation to
    sovereign gracebut the salvation of infants is
    with peculiar circumstances of Gods favour.
  • David McConoughy, Are Infants Saved? in
    Children in Heaven, 60.
  • Spurgeon writes that infants enter heaven,
  • as a matter of free grace with no reference to
    anything that have done Come Ye Children
    (reprint, Warrenton, MO. Children
    Evangelization Fellowship, n.d.), 39.
  • See also Perry G. Downs, Child Evangelization,
    Journal of Christian Education 3 (1983) 10
    Lightner, Heaven for Those Who Cant Believe,
    14-15 Herbert Lockyer, All the Children of the
    Bible (Grand Rapids Zondervan, 1970), 97.

46
7 Redemptive Work of Christ View
  • All infants enjoy heavenly bliss because of the
    redemptive work of Christ on the cross
  • 3. The basis for judgment for the unsaved is
    that they did not receive Jesus Christ as
    personal Savior. Thus, all unregenerate will be
    judged according to their works at the great
    white throne judgment (Rev. 2011). However,
    those who died without ever being able to believe
    will not be there. They have no works they
    have not done either good or evil.
  • As Dr. Lightner states
  • Since those who died before they could believe
    have no works, we may be sure that they will no
    works, we may sure that they will not appear
    before the Great White Throne. And since all the
    unsaved will appear there, we may also be sure
    that those who cannot believe are not unsaved.
    If they are not among the unregenerate and will
    not appear before God at this time, we conclude
    happily that they are among the redeemed.

47
7 Redemptive Work of Christ View
  • All infants enjoy heavenly bliss because of the
    redemptive work of Christ on the cross
  • Critique
  • 1. It is inconsistent to claim that God
    salvation is by faith alone yet claim that there
    is an exception for infants who cannot exercise
    faith (See Sanders, No Other Name, 304).
  • a. Responses Even though infants cannot
    hear the Word, and, therefore,
    cannot exercise faith (Rom. 1017), God need not
    be limited, as Calvin noted, because He
    works in ways we cannot always perceive, and
    He can still bestow His grace Radmacher,
    Salvation, 235. See also Calvin,
    Institutes of the Christian Religion, trans. John
    T. McNeill, 2 vols. (Philadelphia
    Westminster Press, 1960), 4.16.17 4.16.19.
  • b. In the case of infants and those who cant
    believe, God by His mercy applies the
    benefits of salvation in view of unlimited
    atonement (John 316-17, 1015 2 Cor. 519
    Eph. 525 2 Pet. 21 1 John 22, 414).
  • c. It harmonizes with the infant election view
    if this is a valid view.
  • d. It coheres with biblical passages we have
    considered already.

48
7 Redemptive Work of Christ View
  • Critique
  • 2. This view will open up Pandoras Box and
    exceptions could be provided to other situations
    as wellthose who never heard the gospel of
    Jesus, trans-dispensationalism (though faith is
    always the means of salvation, the content of
    salvation in any of Gods economies or
    dispensations is sufficient for salvation See
    Tony Evans, Total Salvation, appendix article
    for support of this view), and some form of
    qualified universalism.
  • Response
  • a. This is not necessary because we arent
    saying anything more than what Scripture
    presents. We must accept the mysterious
    relationship between passages that imply infant
    salvation and salvation by faith alone. If
    someone goes beyond Scripture, such as
    trans-dispensationalism or qualified
    universalism, they are outside of biblical,
    theological coherence and must whole
    heartily be rejected.

49
7 Redemptive Work of Christ View
  • Critique
  • 3. This view is based upon unlimited view of the
    atonement which is debatable among Christians.
  • Response
  • a. There is a stronger cumulative biblical and
    theological case for unlimited atonement
    that is reasonable to believe over and
    against limited atonement.
  • b. Just because something is debatable, does
    not make it biblically or theologically
    unjustifiable.

50
8 Infant Water Baptism View
  • Infants qualify for entrance to heaven by virtue
    of their having been water baptism.
  • 1. Roman Catholicism asserts that infant baptism
    removes the stain of original sin.
  • Baptismsignifies that by the power of the
    Holy Ghost all stain and defilement of sin is
    inwardly washed away, and that the soul is
    enriched and adorned with the admirable gift of
    heavenly justification. Catechism of the
    Council of Trent, 144, cited by J.C. Macaulay,
    The Bible and the Roman Church (Chicago Moody,
    1949), 81. Also see Gunter Koch, Baptism, in
    Handbook of Catholic Theology, ed. Wolfgang
    Beinert and Francis Schusler Florenza (New York
    Crossroad, 1995), 43.

51
8 Infant Water Baptism View
  • Infants qualify for entrance to heaven by virtue
    of their having been water baptism.
  • 1. Roman Catholicism asserts that infant baptism
    removes the stain of original sin.
  • Through Baptism we are freed from sin and
    reborn as sons of God we become members of
    Christ, are incorporated into the Church and
    made sharers in her mission Baptism is the
    sacrament of regeneration through water in the
    word Catechism of the Catholic Church (New
    Hope, N.Y. St. Martin de Porress Community,
    1994), 1213.
  • Since the sacrament of infant baptism is
    necessary for salvation, infants must be
    baptized in order for them to qualify for heaven.

52
8 Infant Water Baptism View
  • Infants qualify for entrance to heaven by virtue
    of their having been water baptism.
  • Critique
  • 1. It is unsupported and contradictory to clear
    exegesis of Scripture.
  • 2. It is contrary to the biblical doctrines of
    soteriology.
  • 3. By implication of this view, unbaptized
    infants do not enter heaven.

53
8 Infant Water Baptism View
  • Infants qualify for entrance to heaven by virtue
    of their having been water baptism.
  • Critique
  • 1. It is unsupported and contradictory to clear
    exegesis of Scripture.
  • 2. It is contrary to the biblical doctrines of
    Soteriology.
  • 3. By implication of this view, unbaptized
    infants do not enter heaven.

54
8 Infant Water Baptism View
  • Consider these quotes
  • The wrath of God abides on them, they remain
    in darkness, and they are eternally doomed,
    though their punishment is less severe than that
    of others. St. Augustine, On the Merits and
    Forgiveness of Sins and on the Baptism of Infants
    1.21, 28, 33-35,in Philip Schaff, ed. A Select
    Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of
    the Christian Church (New York Charles
    Scribners Sons, 1908), 522-23, 25, 28-29.
  • According to the Roman Catholic Catechism of the
    Council of Trent, Infants, unless regenerated
    unto God through the grace of water baptism,
    whether their parents be Christian or infidel,
    are born to eternal misery and perdition
    Sanders, No Other Name, 292.

55
8 Infant Water Baptism View
  • Notwithstanding
  • Notwithstanding, a number of church leaders
    believed that unbaptized infants do go to heaven
    including Victor, John Wycliffe, the Lollards,
    and John Calvin.
  • For example, Calvin wrote, infants are not
    excluded from the kingdom of heaven, who happen
    to die before they had the privilege of baptism
    Institutes, 4.15.22.

56
9 Catholic Limbus Infantum View
  • To soften the Augustinian position, the Roman
    Catholic Church developed the idea of Limbo
    (limbus Infantum), a neutral place for infants
    who die unbaptized. In this place between heaven
    and hell, children experience neither bliss nor
    torment.
  • See Joseph Finkenzeller, Limbo, in Handbook of
    Catholic Theology, 433-35 Zachary Hayes,
    Limbo, in The Modern Catholic Encyclopedia
    (Collegeville, Minn. Liturgical Press, 1994),
    511 P.J. Hill, Limbo, in New Catholic
    Encyclopedia, 18 vols (New York McGraw-Hill
    Book Co., 1967), 8 762-63, 765.

57
9 Catholic Limbus Infantum View
  • Observations
  • 1. It is not admitted or denied as official
    dogma by Catholic Church.
  • 2. If Water Baptism is essential for salvation,
    many infants will not be in heaven.
  • 3. The Roman Catholic position limits salvation
    as being obtainable not by faith but by a
    sacrament or a work.
  • 4. Condemning many infants to limbo obliterates
    the view that Christs atonement work removes,
    by His grace, the guilt of original sin for all
    infants and others who cannot believe.
  • 3. It is entirely extra-biblical which entirely
    justifies the dismissal of this view.

58
10 The Foreknowledge View
  • God, as an omniscient Being, foreknew which
    infants would have believed if they had lived
    long enough. Thus, God saved those infants.
    Thus, the rest are lost, since they would not
    have believed if they had lived long enough to
    do.
  • Observations
  • 1. Ascribes the omniscience view of God (Rom.
    829 Psalm 1391-6).
  • 2. Avoids criticism of God being unmerciful or
    unjust.
  • 3. Accounts for the need for faith as a
    condition for salvation (John 316-19). In
    other words, it avoids the criticism that God
    saves some apart from their willingness to
    receive salvation.
  • 4. Emphasizes the omni-benevolence of Gods love.

59
10 The Foreknowledge View
  • Critique
  • 1. It lacks biblical support.
  • 2. Gods foreknowledge is based on human free
    will rather than in Himself as the Sovereign
    God. In other words, God saves these infants
    because of foreseen faith. However, this is
    contrary to the unmerited grace of God who acts
    solely out of the good pleasure of His will
    (Eph. 15) and not on anything we do (Eph.
    28-9). In fact, God chose the elect before the
    foundation of the world (Eph. 14 cf. Rom.
    829 916 Phil. 129).
  • 3. One can reject foreknowledge as based on
    anyones free choice, but simply, as the
    Scriptures say, in accord with
  • it (cf. 1 Peter 12). In other words, they are
    simply coeternal acts of God with no dependence
    of God on anything we do.

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Possible Solutions Implications
  • All views have difficulties.
  • If faith is not absolutely essential, then a
    distinction needs to made between innocence and
    conscious rejection by adults. If so, it is more
    reasonable to speak of all infants being saved.
  • If faith is an absolute essential for salvation,
    and numerous passages affirm that it is, there is
    no heaven for those who cant believe.

61
Possible Solutions Implications
  • 4. If 3 is correct, then all must believe to
    enter. In this case, belief that infants will
    mature in heaven and be given a chance to
    believe may be more plausible. But this is not
    biblical.
  • 5. If God does not offer a real opportunity to
    believe, then the views that affirm only
    baptized or elect infants go to heaven may seem
    more reasonable to believe. However, the sin
    problem still remains.
  • 6. But if the Bible says that God genuinely
    offers salvation to all then it would follow
    logically that those would believe, if they die
    before they can, will be given a chance after
    they die with the reason being that Gods love
    and/or justice would seem to demand that this be
    so. But this is not biblical either.

62
III. Possible Solutions Implications
  1. If innate radical depravity is inherited from the
    womb, then it would seem that only baptized
    infants or elect infants might go to be with God.
    However, if ones personal decision in rejecting
    Gods message is needed before one goes to hell,
    then they lose plausibility.

63
IV. CONCLUSION
  • Therefore, of the options we have explored, the
    case for the redemptive work of Christ view best
    biblically, theologically coheres and accounts
    for the following passages
  • 1. Inherent sin and guilt
  • 2. unlimited atonement of Christ
  • 3. divine election
  • 4. Love and justice of God
  • 5. Infant salvation.

64
Appendix 1 Heathen Salvation
  • By implication this study helps in our
    understanding of heathen salvation
  • 1. God is just, benevolent, and loving
  • 2. Since one cannot be saved without the
    Gospel, and many heathen lands have not had the
    gospel, it is reasonable to infer that Gods
    elect will be taken from every tribe, kindred,
    and tongue in view of the infants who die.
  • 3. Since it is estimated that in heathen
    countries one-half of the babies born die before
    the age of accountability, then it follows that
    there will be innumerable heathen infants in
    heaven, i.e., all the infants who die before
    they could hear understand the Gospel of Jesus
    Christ.
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