Infant morality

Infant morality June 19, 2017

Birth Born Newborn Baby Child Healthy Baby Infant

Christians who donโ€™t believe in baptizing infants generally hold to the notion of โ€œthe age of accountability.โ€ ย This means that children below a certain age (which varies) do not really sin because they donโ€™t know what they are doing and therefore are not accountable. ย  After they reach that point, they can understand their sinfulness, repent, and make a โ€œdecisionโ€ for Christ.

An article in the evangelical publication Christianity Todayย recounts some fascinating experiments that show that infants do, in fact, have a moral sensibility.

I donโ€™t know that these experimentsย can address the question of โ€œaccountability,โ€ but they do show that infants are not blank slates, to be programmed as we will. ย Rather, they are complex human beings with an innate sense of right and wrong.

And thus, we Lutherans say, they are good candidates for baptism.

FURTHER THOUGHT: ย These experiments also provide evidence that the Law is โ€œwritten on the heartโ€ (Romans 2:15), rather than morality simply being a social construction, as is often assumed today.

Rebecca Randall,ย What Science Says About the Age of Accountabilityโ€ฆ | Christianity Today:

Christians have tended to consider whether babies have a sin nature. The emphasis is on culpabilityโ€”are children capable of right and wrong? Parents know even young children are capable of behaving badly or well. Because of this, Christians have debated an age of accountability, attempting to account for how God might still save children who havenโ€™t reached an age when they understand their sin.

Yet as modern science asks questions about babiesโ€™ morality, it helps us consider human nature as morality developed throughout our lives from infanthood to our senior years. What we find is not so black and white but a developed sense of morality resulting from a mix of nature and nurture.

Can My Baby Sin?

First, in contradiction with early philosophers, psychologists are finding that humans arenโ€™t a blank slate at birth. As Paul Bloom, the author of Just Babies: The Origins of Good and Evil concludes, โ€œWith the help of well-designed experiments, you can see glimmers of moral thought, moral judgment and moral feeling even in the first year of life. Some sense of good and evil seems to be bred in the bone.โ€

[Keep reading. . .]ย 

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