Rip Rokken wrote:conversationpc wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:conversationpc wrote:Being born into sin and being capable of being responsible for one's own sin are two different things, in my opinion. If the child in David's case was born into sin and going to hell as you seem to be indicating, explain to me how David was going to see him again unless David also thought he was going to end up in hell also.
You mention it as your opinion -- is there any firm doctrine on it?
I don't know.
So our doctrines can be simply opinions...conversationpc wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:No, wasn't indicating that about the child in David's case - I took that verse as it read. I was pointing out the contradiction, because God had no problems judging and wasting plenty of kids in other parts of the O.T. Surely there were some babies in Sodom & Gomorrah... and certainly in the world at the time of the great flood. Do you think maybe God just wiped out their bodies but spared the souls?
As stated previously, I don't believe God holds children accountable if they aren't yet aware of their own sin.
There is that "gut truth" again.Seriously, it's a perfectly reasonable, rational and fair notion that very young children can't be held accountable for something they clearly don't understand. But that comes from our own native human sense of morality - not God's. Remember we are talking about a being who will sentence someone to a lifetime of what we would absolutely consider "cruel and unusual punishment" for the simple crime of disbelief, or independent thought.
I should dig up the verse, but there are some that talk about God smearing feces on people or making them eat their own caca as part of their punishment. What is remotely humane about that? Or maybe it's not - just divine.
Rip find me one scripture that says a baby is lost, depraved, sinful. It says man is sinful. A man is not a baby.