I am not sure how blood baptism came from my post about receiving salvation as infant. But as to your post about it, I would just say that you are making this way to complicated and legalistic. A person that is martyred for Jesus Christ, will go to heaven, not because he was martyred, but because he received Salvation through Faith. It really is not much more complicated than that.
This is fine, but doesn’t answer the questions I posted.
ewtn.com/library/DOCTRINE/SACRAMEN.TXT
No you are trying to create a logical fallacy Mutes cannot confess with thier mouth using your logic they can never be saved
original sin, its effects on the souls of all people, and the necessity of baptism for its removal. Genesis 3:16-24, Romans 5:12-19, 1 Corinthians 15:21-22, and Galatians 3:27.
Several things happen at baptism. First, the spiritual (though not physical) effects of original sin are removed from the soul. This removal is accompanied by an infusion of sanctifying grace, which makes the soul spiritually alive. The soul receives an indelible character that irrevocably identifies it as a member of the heavenly family.
Also, all punishment due to pre-baptismal actual sins is completely remitted
ewtn.com/library/ANSWERS/CAMORM2.HTM
We are not saved as individuals, or by our own power, but we are saved inasmuch as we are members of Christ. That means we must be like Him. Hence in Gal 5:13-26 Paul gives two lists: the fruits of the Spirit, and the works of the flesh. If we follow the flesh, we will die. We will not inherit. But we must follow the Spirit. Romans 8:9:“If anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.” - that Spirit leads us to do as Christ did, which means to avoid sin. We cannot say: If we have taken
Christ as our Savior we can sin as much as we want. For faith includes obedience - cf. Romans1:5. We cannot say if we have faith we can disobey, for faith includes obedience.
5 Jesus answered: Amen, amen I say to thee, unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.
This is really the syn Christo theme of St. Paul: We must suffer with Him, die with Him, be buried with Him, rise with Him, ascend with Him (cf. Romans 8. 17; 6:3-8; Col. 3:1-4; Eph. 2:5-6; Rom 8:13.
We should notice too the fact that there are two stages, sometimes called objective redemption and subjective redemption. The objective redemtion is the work of earning a claim to all forgiveness and grace – we do not contribute to that at all, Christ did it for us. The subjective redemption is the process of giving out that forgiveness and grace thoughout all subsequent ages, even today. It is in that that we need to be like Christ to share in the claim He generated.
Our part in the subjective redemption is had by being like Christ in suffering and other things. God likes this as part of His love of good order. Summa I.19.5.c., paraphrased (literal is very crude) says: God in His love of good order likes to have one thing in place to serve as a reason or title for giving the second thing, even though that thing does not really move Him. Hence, in the objective redemption, He was pleased to use the Blessed Mother (whose ability to do anything came from her Son). In the subjective redemption, He uses her, the Saints, and us.
ewtn.com/library/SCRIPTUR/EARNSAL.TXT