Original Sin

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Hi Susan.

The unchanging God of the Old Testament punished generation after generation for sins of the ancestors.

So I’m not sure why any Christians would see a problem with this concept. I’m hoping a Orthodox Christian chimes in because i know they don’t believe in it.
This is not the LDS Christian view at all. Individuals hold ZERO blame for the sins of their forefathers, though they may have to face consequences of those actions. For example, a mom is addicted to drugs and lives in poverty because of it. Her child is NOT responsible for her sins and bears no guilt of it, but still has to deal with the poverty environment growing up.
 
I believe I answered this question. 🙂 But it’s the same for babies who die before birth. Having said that anyone may baptize with water so if the opportunity arises, the infant should be baptized. After all, we don’t know precisely when the soul leaves the body. Besides this there are other forms of baptism that may apply–baptism of desire and baptism of blood. Only God would know if either applied to an infant who dies before birth (as in the case of abortion). Knowing that God is merciful and just, we give all such infants into God’s loving arms. He desires that all be saved, and he is able to operate outside the sacraments as he pleases, so we don’t have to believe that God is mere a stickler for rules. But he does expect us to do our part if we are able.
Yes, thank you for answering my question. I do understand that the current Catholic consensus is that unbaptized babies are in God’s merciful hands. I am just not sure if that is different from baptized babies. Are they also in “God’s merciful hands,” or are they definitely in heaven? I know in the past there was a belief that the unbaptized were unsaved or in a separate pleasurable place “limbo(?).” I believe there has been no official teaching on this. I just wonder if some think they are boosting their child’s chance at a different afterlife when they baptize their child.
2 Samuel 12:23 where David states that he will see his 7 day old (uncircumcised?) deceased son in the afterlife seems to imply that babies will not be in hell. “….Can I bring him back again? I will go to him, but he will not return to me.” In the Jewish faith they had no way or removing Original Sin because they did not have that concept yet. I don’t think Jesus coming to earth should cause babies to now be impure when they were not considered this way before he came. Or did they just view it different in the old law?
 
Hi Jane.

May I ask what is the accountability age for LDS, and who determined that? And by what method or formula was it determined?

Pax
I don’t know about the age of accountability specific to LDS. I think they have specific guidelines. I have wondered about the right age of accountability for Christianity in general.
Based on Judaism, I have heard that it is as late as 20 years old based on the fact that those over 20 were the ones punished and unable to get to the Promised Land in Numbers 14:29-30. Those under 20 were not held accountable for the sins of their parents. Also, I think 20 is the age where they would pay a temple tax. I have also heard 12 or 13 which is the age where Jewish tradition celebrates a bat-mitzvah or bar-mitzvah. At that time the child now becomes held accountable to the law and is therefore capable of sin and in need of repentance. I think that would have been what was practiced by the Jewish people while Jesus was on earth. I don’t know a lot about the Jewish faith, though.
Is the age of accountability in Catholicism at the time of confirmation? Or is it at the age of 7 when they have the first confession and first communion?
Sometimes I wonder if God didn’t give a specific age because each and every circumstance is different and it is more complex than a numerical age…
 
Yes, thank you for answering my question. I do understand that the current Catholic consensus is that unbaptized babies are in God’s merciful hands. I am just not sure if that is different from baptized babies. Are they also in “God’s merciful hands,” or are they definitely in heaven? I know in the past there was a belief that the unbaptized were unsaved or in a separate pleasurable place “limbo(?).” I believe there has been no official teaching on this. I just wonder if some think they are boosting their child’s chance at a different afterlife when they baptize their child.
Deceased baptized babies are in heaven since the stain of original sin was removed in baptism, and they were full of the grace of their baptism, having been unable to commit any personal sins.
2 Samuel 12:23 where David states that he will see his 7 day old (uncircumcised?) deceased son in the afterlife seems to imply that babies will not be in hell. “….Can I bring him back again? I will go to him, but he will not return to me.” In the Jewish faith they had no way or removing Original Sin because they did not have that concept yet. I don’t think Jesus coming to earth should cause babies to now be impure when they were not considered this way before he came. Or did they just view it different in the old law?
Even the Jews before Jesus day weren’t sure of the fate of deceased infants. They never believed that infants were “innocent” in the way you mean:

Ps.58[3] The wicked go astray from the womb,
they err from their birth, speaking lies.[RSV]

Ps. 51[5]Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me. [NIV]

Everyone (except Jesus and Mary) is born with the stain of original sin. We are all innocent of personal sin when born, but we need the stain of original sin removed through baptism. The people of the OT had to rely on the sacrifices made for them, as Mary and Joseph offered for Jesus, as infants. But all the sacrifices were but foreshadowings of the redemption that Christ brought about through his death and resurrection. All are, therefore, saved in Christ, from the OT forward–as they looked forward to the coming of the Messiah. Not all understood this concept, of course. But we read the OT through the lens of Christ’s life and mission, seeing clearly things that were hidden from them revealed now to us, as St. Paul wrote.
 
I can’t answer the first part of your question, but anyone may baptize another. I don’t believe that any dispensation was ever needed in emergency situations. However, baptisms ought to be done by a proper minister of the Church, if possible. Parents should know that their child is to be baptized. No one should take it upon himself to baptize an infant without his parents permission. Still, such a baptism would be valid although illicitly done.
Thanks D,

I believe the time frame was the middles ages for the practice I mentioned. Understand things may be different today, thankfully.

Blessings
 
Thanks D,

I believe the time frame was the middles ages for the practice I mentioned. Understand things may be different today, thankfully.

Blessings
Your question prompted me to do a bit of research. From what I could find, there was no formal denial of burial of unbaptized infants born of baptized parents. For those denied, the concern was desecration of Church property, not a judgment passed on the souls of the unbaptized, although it’s understandable that people might take it that way. And it was no doubt too rigorously applied in some places, but there was no Church mandate to deny burial to unbaptized infants that I could find.

Before modern communications local clergy interpreted canon law as best they could. If they had questions they needed answered they had to go to a canon lawyer, not usually available to more remote areas apart from large cities. So, no doubt abuses took place, as abuses will when people aren’t as well informed as they’d wished to be. The local pastor had to make such judgment calls. No doubt, they sometimes erred on the side of concern about desecrating Church grounds. I’m not excusing any mistakes made, but it’s not true that the Church set out to deny such infants entry into heaven or any other such idea, implied by some—not by you, of course. 🙂
 
Yes, thank you for answering my question. I do understand that the current Catholic consensus is that unbaptized babies are in God’s merciful hands. I am just not sure if that is different from baptized babies. Are they also in “God’s merciful hands,” or are they definitely in heaven?
The CC accepts Jesus’ words “he who is baptized will be saved” are valid in the case of infants.

The Apostles taught that baptism washed all sins, original, and personal, and that a newly baptised person were they to die, would go immediately to heaven.
I know in the past there was a belief that the unbaptized were unsaved or in a separate pleasurable place “limbo(?).” I believe there has been no official teaching on this. I just wonder if some think they are boosting their child’s chance at a different afterlife when they baptize their child.
You are right, trusting their souls to a faithful creator used to be called “limbo” but it was a theological speculation and never part of the doctrine of the faith, though it was taught as if it was.

Catholics do not believe heaven has anything to do with “chance” and everything to do with being in a state of grace. Baptism accomplishes that required state of grace.
2 Samuel 12:23 where David states that he will see his 7 day old (uncircumcised?) deceased son in the afterlife seems to imply that babies will not be in hell. “….Can I bring him back again? I will go to him, but he will not return to me.” In the Jewish faith they had no way or removing Original Sin because they did not have that concept yet. I don’t think Jesus coming to earth should cause babies to now be impure when they were not considered this way before he came. Or did they just view it different in the old law?
Yes, they were under a different covenant, where sins were paid with animal sacrifice. Babies were brought into that Covenant at 8 days (which is one reason the Church continued the practice of initiating infants into the covenant.
 
I understand that for a long time you could not bury an unbaptized infant child in the church/local cemetery if not baptized. Anybody hear of this ? Made people scurry for the priest. I think midwives were finally granted the privilege of baptizing in emergency situations.
Yes, anyone can baptize, and you are right, there were some strange rules about the use of “consecrated ground”. People who were not believed to have died in a state of grace would not be buried on the Church property, like suicides and unbaptized infants. The truth is that only God can know the STate of the soul, and when we look at outward appearances, mistakes are made.
Is the age of accountability in Catholicism at the time of confirmation? Or is it at the age of 7 when they have the first confession and first communion?
This is a good question, because it has changed over the years. Yes, currently it is at the time of first confession. There would be nothing to confess if they could not be personally responsible. Confirmation used to happen much younger, and the Eastern Catholics follow the Orthodox practice of all the rites of initiation (baptism, communion and confirmation) all occur at the same time in infancy.
Sometimes I wonder if God didn’t give a specific age because each and every circumstance is different and it is more complex than a numerical age…
I think you are right, and the Bishop can allow whatever is prudent and fitting for that reason.
Everyone (except Jesus and Mary) is born with the stain of original sin.
I believe the Church teaches that John the Baptist was sanctified in his mother’s womb when Jesus’ mother came to visit, and thus was conceived in original sin, but born cleansed. 😃
 
The CC accepts Jesus’ words “he who is baptized will be saved” are valid in the case of infants.

The Apostles taught that baptism washed all sins, original, and personal, and that a newly baptised person were they to die, would go immediately to heaven.
Are Jesus’ words you are speaking of Mark 16:16? "16 Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned."
Certainly an infant couldn’t fulfill the part about belief, but I think few today would argue that an infant would be punished for this.
Other places in the Bible, like John 3:16 and Acts 16:31, belief is given as the only requirement for being “saved” or having “eternal life.”

Belief alone is thought to be adequate, like in the case for someone taking classes to prepare for baptism.
Baptism alone is adequate for a young child.
Baptism alone is not adequate for an older child or adult who received infant baptism, but does not believe.
It seems like before age 7, baptism alone can provide sure salvation - Later childhood and adulthood, belief alone is the only way to have sure salvation. Does that sound right?

I am just trying to understand better the rationale for infant baptism.
 
Code:
 Are Jesus' words you are speaking of Mark 16:16? "16 ***Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned***."
Certainly an infant couldn’t fulfill the part about belief, but I think few today would argue that an infant would be punished for this.
The CC teaches that no one can be baptized without a profession of faith. For infants and young children, the profession by their parents and godparents is acceptable (they also take vows to raise the child in the faith).

The CC does not consider the consequences of original sin as personal punishment. We are all born into the word without being in right relationship with God because our original state of justice was lost in the Fall. The reason those who reject Christ are “condemned already” is because this is the state into which we all enter the world.
Other places in the Bible, like John 3:16 and Acts 16:31, belief is given as the only requirement for being “saved” or having “eternal life.”
The CC reads and understands the Bible from the point of view of those who wrote it. For the Apostles “only belief to be saved” does not mean what it does to modern Bible Christains (praying the sinners prayer). “Beleive” for the Aposltes meant clinging to all that Jesus taught.
Belief alone is thought to be adequate, like in the case for someone taking classes to prepare for baptism.
Not for Catholics, it is not. “Belief” means a commitment to become a disciple, at baptism, the parents are taught what this obligates them to do for the baptized child. It also requires that at least one parent be in good standing with the church. Maybe I misunderstand what you have written, but what would be the point of baptism classes if “belief alone is adequate”? If it were, the parents would not be required to come to the class!
Baptism alone is adequate for a young child.
That is just it, though, the baptism is not “alone”. It is accompanied by obligations to raise the child in the faith. The CC believes that saving faith is faith that works.
Baptism alone is not adequate for an older child or adult who received infant baptism, but does not believe.
It is not up to us to judge the state of another persons’ soul before God. It is true that a number of Catholics fall away from the faith into which they were baptized (I was one of them).
It seems like before age 7, baptism alone can provide sure salvation - Later childhood and adulthood, belief alone is the only way to have sure salvation. Does that sound right?
We believe that baptism is salvific. I don’t know what you mean by “faith alone” so I can’t respond to that part. CC don’t believe in faith alone. Saving Faith is always accompanied by love and hope. Saving faith is faith that works - faith that produces fruit.
I am just trying to understand better the rationale for infant baptism.
It is really simple. Either God meant what he said that the wages of sin is death, or not. Original sin results in us being in a state of separation from God. Baptism restores that relationship.
 
The CC teaches that no one can be baptized without a profession of faith. For infants and young children, the profession by their parents and godparents is acceptable (they also take vows to raise the child in the faith).

The CC does not consider the consequences of original sin as personal punishment. We are all born into the word without being in right relationship with God because our original state of justice was lost in the Fall. The reason those who reject Christ are “condemned already” is because this is the state into which we all enter the world.

The CC reads and understands the Bible from the point of view of those who wrote it. For the Apostles “only belief to be saved” does not mean what it does to modern Bible Christains (praying the sinners prayer). “Beleive” for the Aposltes meant clinging to all that Jesus taught.
I don’t think it is fair to say the last paragraph about Protestantism as a whole. They may interpret some teachings differently, but the vast majority do “cling to teaching” and strive to live a Christian life. A few modern churches in the past few decades may have started going astray into hyper-grace. My Catholic friend already told me all about this last year, but this isn’t common. I only know about if from Catholics. It must be common for Catholics to talk about.
Not for Catholics, it is not. “Belief” means a commitment to become a disciple, at baptism, the parents are taught what this obligates them to do for the baptized child. It also requires that at least one parent be in good standing with the church. Maybe I misunderstand what you have written, but what would be the point of baptism classes if “belief alone is adequate”? If it were, the parents would not be required to come to the class!
I am just referring to Mark 16:16 with the requirements for salvation being belief and baptism. Is someone is in RCIA preparing for baptism, but passes away while in the class, it would be believed that they could probably be saved even though they haven’t been baptized. Therefore they only fulfilled one requirement specific to Mark 16:16. (This part of Mark isn’t even in the oldest manuscripts either.)
That is just it, though, the baptism is not “alone”. It is accompanied by obligations to raise the child in the faith. The CC believes that saving faith is faith that works. It is not up to us to judge the state of another persons’ soul before God. It is true that a number of Catholics fall away from the faith into which they were baptized (I was one of them).

We believe that baptism is salvific. I don’t know what you mean by “faith alone” so I can’t respond to that part. CC don’t believe in faith alone. Saving Faith is always accompanied by love and hope. Saving faith is faith that works - faith that produces fruit.
That sounds similar to what the reformers taught. “We are saved by faith alone, but the faith that saves is never alone.” ― Martin Luther
It is really simple. Either God meant what he said that the wages of sin is death, or not. Original sin results in us being in a state of separation from God. Baptism restores that relationship.
I think I am learning more about original sin, but becoming more confused. I hear in posts that infants aren’t born guilty, but they are born separated from God and in need of baptism to forgive them and bring then back to God. Doesn’t mean they are born guilty? They have no personal sins, but they aren’t pure and sinless either. Is Original Sin the primary reason for infant baptism?
 
Romans 5:12–
Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death came through sin, and so death spread to all because all have sinned.
 
…what is being taken away in baptism? Or is it simply grace given to them and no washing away of sin that takes place? Is it the belief that being baptized will make one more likely to accept Christ later in life?
Unless one is baptized (by water, desire, or blood) there will not be the Beatific Vision after death, because there will not be a state of sanctifying grace present. Adam and Eve were given the initial state of sanctifying grace, which we are not.

St. John Chrysostom, Baptismal Instruction. (Ancient Christian Writers, p. 57)

3:6"You have seen how numerous are the gifts of baptism. Although many men think that the only gift it confers is the remission of sins, we have counted its honors to the number of ten. It is on this account that we baptize even infants, although they are sinless, that they may be given the further gifts of sanctification, justice, filial adoption, and inheritance, that they may be brothers and members of Christ, and become dwelling places of the Spirit."

12:6: “You are called faithful both because you believe in God and have as a trust from him justificaton, sanctity, purity of soul, filial adoption, and the kingdom of heaven.”

Mentioned in 3:6:
1 remission of sins
2 sanctification
3 justice
4 filial adoption
5 inheritance
6 brothers of Christ
7 members of Christ
8 dwelling places for the Holy Spirit

Two more mentioned in 12:6:
9 purity of soul
10 kingdom of heaven

books.google.com/books?id=xC9GAdUGX5sC&pg=PA581&lpg=PA581&dq=ancient+christian+baptismal+instructions&source=bl&ots=BsaK0-HWzv&sig=qzr0ByV4c89cbpTuO1pU7fxjdhI&hl=en&ei=fii_TtbJDM-1tge_75C8Bg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CFUQ6AEwCDgU#v=onepage&q=ancient%20christian%20baptismal%20instructions&f=false
 
I don’t think it is fair to say the last paragraph about Protestantism as a whole.
I don’t either, which is why I did not. 😃

They may interpret some teachings differently, but the vast majority do “cling to teaching” and strive to live a Christian life.

Personally I find such persons better refelctions of a disciple of Christ than most Catholics.
A few modern churches in the past few decades may have started going astray into hyper-grace. My Catholic friend already told me all about this last year, but this isn’t common. I only know about if from Catholics. It must be common for Catholics to talk about.
I did not encounter people who thought this way until after I left the CC.
Code:
I am just referring to Mark 16:16 with the requirements for salvation being belief and baptism. Is someone is in RCIA preparing for baptism, but passes away while in the class, it would be believed that they could probably be saved even though they haven't been baptized. Therefore they only fulfilled one requirement specific to Mark 16:16. (This part of Mark isn't even in the oldest manuscripts either.)
Oh I thought you were talking about required baptismal classes for parents! Yes, this is called a “baptism of desire”, where the individual would have been baptized had the opportunity not been snatched away by an untimely death.
That sounds similar to what the reformers taught. “We are saved by faith alone, but the faith that saves is never alone.” ― Martin Luther
It is frightening how much drift there has been away from the thought and practices of the Reformers. At least the CC has been able to restore some of the tears that occurred over the misunderstood concept of salvation by “faith alone”.
I think I am learning more about original sin, but becoming more confused. I hear in posts that infants aren’t born guilty, but they are born separated from God and in need of baptism to forgive them and bring then back to God. Doesn’t mean they are born guilty? They have no personal sins, but they aren’t pure and sinless either. Is Original Sin the primary reason for infant baptism?
Yes. We are not guilty of original sin (we are not personally responsible for the sin of Adam and Eve) but we suffer the consequences, which is that we are born into a fallen world, in a state without the right relationship with God (justice) for which we were created.

12Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man and death through sin, so also death was passed on to all men, because all sinned. Rom 5:12

This is not a reference to personal sin, but a reference to being in a state of injustice before God.

Baptism washes away the separated state, and restores us through grace to a right relationship with Him.
 
Unless one is baptized (by water, desire, or blood) there will not be the Beatific Vision after death, because there will not be a state of sanctifying grace present. Adam and Eve were given the initial state of sanctifying grace, which we are not.

St. John Chrysostom, Baptismal Instruction. (Ancient Christian Writers, p. 57)

3:6"You have seen how numerous are the gifts of baptism. Although many men think that the only gift it confers is the remission of sins, we have counted its honors to the number of ten. It is on this account that we baptize even infants, although they are sinless, that they may be given the further gifts of sanctification, justice, filial adoption, and inheritance, that they may be brothers and members of Christ, and become dwelling places of the Spirit."

12:6: “You are called faithful both because you believe in God and have as a trust from him justificaton, sanctity, purity of soul, filial adoption, and the kingdom of heaven.”

Mentioned in 3:6:
1 remission of sins
2 sanctification
3 justice
4 filial adoption
5 inheritance
6 brothers of Christ
7 members of Christ
8 dwelling places for the Holy Spirit

Two more mentioned in 12:6:
9 purity of soul
10 kingdom of heaven

books.google.com/books?id=xC9GAdUGX5sC&pg=PA581&lpg=PA581&dq=ancient+christian+baptismal+instructions&source=bl&ots=BsaK0-HWzv&sig=qzr0ByV4c89cbpTuO1pU7fxjdhI&hl=en&ei=fii_TtbJDM-1tge_75C8Bg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CFUQ6AEwCDgU#v=onepage&q=ancient%20christian%20baptismal%20instructions&f=false
Thank you for this explanation.
 
We muslims don’t believe in Original Sin. We believe that when Adam and Eve sinned [peace be upon them], they repented and God forgave them. There’s a sense in which you could say that we believe in Original Forgiveness. 👍
Thank you for your response. I have heard Genesis 3:21 “The Lord God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them.” as an example of the first time blood had to be shed to “cover” mankind’s sin. This would seem to go along with this understanding of forgiveness given personally to Adam and Eve (along with earthly consequences).
I didn’t even know about a Doctrine of Original Sin until last year. I am trying to figure it all out. All of the different responses were helpful.
 
I didn’t even know about a Doctrine of Original Sin until last year. I am trying to figure it all out. All of the different responses were helpful.
Well, infant baptism has been taught since the time of the Apostles:

§ 73. Infant Baptism.

… At the same time it seems an almost certain fact, though by many disputed, that, with the baptism of converts, the optional baptism of the children of Christian parents in established congregations, comes down from the apostolic age. Pious parents would naturally feel a desire to consecrate their offspring from the very beginning to the service of the Redeemer, and find a precedent in the ordinance of circumcision.
ccel.org/s/schaff/history/2_ch05.htm
 
Yes, anyone can baptize, and you are right, there were some strange rules about the use of “consecrated ground”. People who were not believed to have died in a state of grace would not be buried on the Church property, like suicides and unbaptized infants. The truth is that only God can know the STate of the soul, and when we look at outward appearances, mistakes are made.
Hi g,

Thanks for reply. Saw a history show and they discussed in depth some of this, during the middle ages. Seemed to imply a very strong repercussion for an infant not being baptized.

Blessings
 
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