When a child is unbaptized and dies, what happens to his soul…to the souls of babies who die in the womb?
I’ve been wanting to answer this question but I wanted to give it some prayerful thought first.
Officially speaking we do not know what happens to these babies. The Bible does not tell us and there is no official Church teaching that I am aware of.
What I do know is, by definition original sin is a separation from God. Adam walked with God in the garden and when he sinned God no longer walked the earth with man.
Due to this separation (original sin) the gates of heaven were closed to us. Thankfully, Christ came and opened the gates. However, we are still born with original sin, which I would define as the lack of God’s grace to get us to heaven. Without God’s grace, being born anew, we are still separated from Him. You said…
It’s quite simple to me. People who die in infancy are covered by the blood of Jesus.
I disagree. If we are automatically covered by the blood of Jesus then we would already have God’s grace which means we would be born without original sin.
I don’t mean to sound unkind or unloving to these babies. But think through what you claim to it’s logical extent. If the baby in the womb is automatically covered by the blood of Christ wouldn’t it be best for us to terminate the pregnancy instead of bringing that baby into a starving household, what if the baby has a mental defect, what if it is time of war, etc. I’m not saying this is what you are saying I’m just pointing out these are prochoice questions posted right here on this forum. It’s this line of reasoning, that these babies are already saved, as their reason why these people post these questions.
That being said, unofficially I doubt these children would be damned to Hell, but I also doubt they would be in heaven. I would lean more towards them being somewhere content but still not with God.
Also, unofficially, from what I understand from the Catholic point of view. Baptism wipes away the stain of original sin giving the person the free gift of grace allowing the gates of heaven to be open to them. Also, from the Catholic point of view we believe the God takes into account the faith of the parents to allow the child to receive His free gift of Grace through infant Baptism. Finally, Catholics also believe God will bestow His free gift of grace upon the faithful person who intends to be Baptized, but dies before this takes place.
So it is my opinion, not official Church teaching, that God would take the faithful intent of the parent, who would have Baptized their child and raised them in the faith, if they survived, into account in the same way he would for an adult who intended to get Baptized.
I have no way of proving if I am correct. But logically it makes more sense to me than to just say well they’re saved because they are covered by the blood of Christ, but once you reach an age of reason, and are culpable for your sins, you’re no longer covered, unless you repent and believe.
Hope this isn’t to confusing.
God Bless