Thursday, June 29, 2023

This installment is titled “The History & Theology of Calvinism” by Curt Daniel, Chapter 50, The Election of Dying Infants.


Here is another issue many Gospel ministries do their best to stay completely away from, despite the fact that we all should be willing to address (if never wholly resolved) the challenging issues of life.


This chapter is worth the book’s price for no other reason than to clarify matters that may be faced by precious Church members and other believers who have lost a child in infancy.


The chapter is divided into twelve parts.


“Lewis Sperry Chafer once wrote, “No theology is established or complete which does not account for the salvation of those who died in infancy.” Reformed theology addresses the issue, but there is not a unanimous consensus, only a general tendency and majority report. This is the second of three hard cases relating to election. If all dying infants are saved, they are all elect. If none are saved, they are all reprobate. If some are saved and not others, some are elect, and others are not. I hasten to add at the outset that the discussion is over infants who died in infancy, not those who reached childhood or adolescence.”


The Options: Seven options are presented, followed by three discussion paragraphs.


Original Sin: Two paragraphs of discussion.


The Question of Baptism: Two parapgraph, with this issue a settled issue for Baptists.


The Roman Catholic View: Three paragraphs.


Non-Reformed Views: Three paragraphs, including comments about Anabaptists.


The Question of Infant Faith: Four paragraphs, including discussions of John the Baptist and the prophet Jeremiah.


The Age of Reason: This is the portion of the chapter dealing with what some refer to as the age of accountability. Eight paragraphs of discussion.


Are Dying Infants Saved? Five paragraphs. A good introduction to this topic, including a comment by C. H. Spurgeon.


Other Texts and Arguments: Five paragraphs, with a recommendation of Robert Alexander Webb’s work, The Theology of Infant Salvation.


Problems: Four paragraphs. Heaven For Those Who Can’t Believe, by Robert Lightner is mentioned as often helpful, mentioning the fate of unborn babies and their unsaved mothers at the time of the Rapture.


How Are Dying Infants Saved? Eight paragraphs. This is a provocative and insightful portion of the chapter.


Conclusions: Comfort and assurance of God’s character are found in two paragraphs.