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WHAT HAPPENS
TO CHILDREN WHO DIE BEFORE THEY CAN ACCEPT THE GOSPEL?
By R. C. Sproul
In my own theological tradition,
we believe that those children who die in infancy are numbered
among the redeemed. That is to say, we hope and have a certain
level of confidence that God will be particularly gracious toward
those who have never had the opportunity to be exposed to the
gospel, such as infants or children who are too disabled to hear
and understand.
The New Testament does not teach us this explicitly. It does tell
us a lot about the character of God-about his mercy and his grace-and
gives us every reason to have that kind of confidence in his dealings
with children. Some will make a distinction between infants in
general and those who are children of believers, the reason being
that when God made a covenant with Abraham, he made it not only
with Abraham, but with Abraham's descendants. In fact, as soon
as God entered into that relationship with Abraham, he brought
Isaac into it-when Isaac was still an infant and didn't have an
understanding of what was going on. This is the reason, incidentally,
that a large number of Christian bodies practice the baptism of
infants; they believe that children of believers are to be incorporated
into full membership in the church. We see this relationship within
the family in biblical history.
We also see David's situation in the Old Testament when his infant
child dies. Yet David is given the confidence that he will see
that child again in heaven. That story of David and his dying
child gives a tremendous consolation to parents who have lost
infants to death.
Now the point that we have to make is that infants who die are
given a special dispensation of the grace of God; it is not by
their innocence but by God's grace that they are received into
heaven. There are great controversies that hover over the doctrine
of original sin. Lutherans disagree with Roman Catholics, who
disagree in turn with Presbyterians, etc., on the scope and extent
of what we call original sin. Original sin does not refer to the
first sin that was committed, but rather to the result of that-the
entrance of sin into the world so that all of us as human beings
are born in a fallen state. We come into this world with a sin
nature, and so the baby that dies, dies as a sinful child. And
when that child is received into heaven, he is received by grace.
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