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What About the Babies? by West End Church of Christ

What About the Babies?
What About the Babies? 
Many years ago Mark Twain delivered a speech entitled, "What About 
the Babies."  It was a very entertaining and delightful speech delivered 
to a very select audience made up of statesmen, generals, and prominent 
businessmen.  He began by saying, "We might propose a toast to the fine 
generals here but that would include only a few of us.  We might propose 
a toast to the statesmen among us but that again would include only some 
of us.  We might even propose a toast to the lovely ladies among us, but 
that would not include all of us.  There is just one thing we all have 
in common -- we've all been babies."  And Mr. Twain's comments are true.  
Today, study with me the question, "What About the Babies?" 

But first, we of the West End Church of Christ present these 
fifteen minute programs in the interest of publicly proclaiming the 
truth of God's gospel.  We wish to be free as humanly possible from 
sectarianism and creedalism.  It is our intention to proclaim only the 
truth of God and that is why we repeatedly ask any of our listeners to 
remind us if we do not measure up to that worthy objective.  We do not 
want to knowingly preach anything but the truth as revealed in the 
Bible.  This is no dare, no challenge; it is a sincere appeal to all 
rational people to investigate personally what is said.
   
We also wish to invite you very cordially to attend our meetings.  
Sunday we meet at 9 a.m. for Bible classes.  During this hour of study 
we divide into groups (usually, but not always, in age groups) and 
discuss relevant and vital Bible topics.  Then at 10 a.m. each Sunday we 
assemble in one place for worship.  We sing praises to the Lord, we 
observe the sacred memorial feast of the Lord's Supper, we engage in 
congregational prayers, give of our means and honor the sacred Godhead 
by teaching the word.  Please come and visit with us at least once.  We 
are located at the corner of Parkside Drive and Old Morgantown Road, 
just across from Lampkin Park.
 
What about babies?  The word of the Lord has a lot to say about 
them.  One of the purposes God established the marital relationship was 
to produce them.  Babies come to our homes as gifts from God and with 
the gift comes the responsibility laid on parents to bring them up in 
the right way, so when they are older they will never want to depart 
from the way that is right.
 
Children should become a very serious concern for every responsible 
person who marries and establishes a home.  We hear so much about 
neglected children, children who become innocent victims of terrible 
abuse.  How tragic it is to think that a grown person could ever be 
unkind, even cruel to a very precious little bundle of  joy.  But sadly 
it does happen. 

Not all abuse to babies comes in the form of physical abuse.  I 
believe some children are abused very early in life by being deprived of 
something that is more important to them  than their  z84 formulas, 
pabulum, or medicine.  That of which a child is deprived that is the 
most important is love and concern.  A child needs love and concern more 
than food and medicine in order to develop normally as a social being.  
This is not to say that physical care is relegated to a position of 
lesser importance -- it is to emphasize the importance of providing that 
which will help a child develop normally with a sound mind, a proper 
attitude toward life, and with a well balanced psychological stability.  
But sadly, many babies never even know their real fathers.  Just 
recently, a CBS news program noted that over 30 % of the babies born in 
one of our largest cities in this nation never know their fathers.  
Either through being born out of wedlock, or by a father's desertion of 
the mother, the child never knows the father at all.  The break up of 
homes in our nation is causing much more problem than a strain on the 
economy in the form of welfare checks.  It is eating the foundation 
right out from under any kind of morality.
 
God Almighty will hold us accountable for the way we handle our 
obligations in all realms of life.  We are responsible to obey God and 
honor Him in society, in the domestic circles, in spiritual 
relationships, and in every other area of our earthly existence.  It is 
a duty from which we may never abdicate.  In one of those very beautiful 
Psalms called, "The Psalms of Ascent," (Psalms often chanted by the Jews 
returning to Jerusalem annually to worship Jehovah) is found this 
beautiful thought.
   
"Behold, children are a heritage from the Lord.  The fruit of the 
womb is His reward.  Like arrows in the hand of a warrior, So are the 
children of one's youth.  Happy is the man who has his quiver full of 
them" (Psalm 127:3-5a).
 
Babies deserve a good home, for they did not have the chance to 
select their parents.  God made the selection and insists that we do 
what is right for them.  But, let's think of another aspect of babies. 
What happens in the very sad and unfortunate event that a baby 
should die?  I can think of nothing more traumatic and soul wrenching 
that can  happen to a young married couple who lose a baby to death.  
And it can and does happen.  To be able to accept it and understand it 
is not an easy chore.  Many parents blame God and turn their back on 
Him.  But God is not to blame.  God's establishes a natural law of 
production in humans and also a natural law in nature.  Abiding within 
the confines of is natural law will sometimes bring adverse 
circumstances; circumstances over which humans have no control.  So, we 
accept what living in this world brings -- both the sweet and the 
unsweet.
 
But a deeper question remains.  What happens to the baby at death?  
Many years ago, there was a man named Augustine.  He held to a view that 
led people to conclude that all babies are born in sin.  I have a book 
in my library that is very old.  It is the 1902 edition of the Methodist 
Discipline.  On the article entitled "Of Original or Birth Sin," it 
reads:
 
"Original sin standeth not in the following of Adam (as the 
Pelagians do vainly talk), but it is the corruption of the nature of 
every man, that naturally is engendered of the offspring of Adam, 
whereby man is very far gone from original righteousness, and of his own 
nature inclined to evil, and that continually."  (Page 5).  This is why 
infant  baptism is administered -- at  z84 least why it was originally 
administered.  Again from the same book we read the minister's words 
which must be used when administering baptism to an infant.  It reads: 
"Dearly beloved, forasmuch as all men are conceived and born in 
sin, and that our Saviour Christ saith, Except a man be born of water 
and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God: I beseech 
you to call upon God the Father, through our Lord Jesus Christ, that of 
his bounteous goodness he will grant to this child, now to be baptized 
with water, that which by nature he cannot have: that he may be baptized 
with the Holy Ghost, received into Christ's holy Church, and be made a 
lively member of the same."  (Page 219). 

This is an ancient book -- it was written back in 1902 and stated 
the view that since babies are born in sin they must be baptized in 
order to have their corrupt nature removed.  An old New England Psalter 
(or prayer and hymn book) has the line: "In Adam's fall, we sinned all."  
This is the theory known as total, inherited depravity.  It opines that 
since Adam and Eve fell by transgression in the Garden of Eden, all who 
are born are born depraved, regardless of how good and holy their 
parents may have been.  What is called the "Adamic Nature" is 
transferred to the child at birth just the same way its little traits 
peculiar to it are given. 

The truth about babies is that this doctrine is simply not true.  
To offset the hideous doctrine that little babies are born as sinners we 
have but to turn to the New Testament and read something about Christ 
and little ones.  One time when Jesus was teaching the people, a few of 
the mothers in the crowd brought their little babies to Him just so He 
could touch them.  Listen to the passage -- Mark 10:13-16. 
"Then they brought young children to Him, that He might touch them; 
but the disciples rebuked those who brought them.  But when Jesus saw 
it, He was greatly displeased and said to them, 'Let the little children 
come to Me, and do not forbid them; for of such is the kingdom of God.  
Assuredly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as 
a little child will by no means enter it.'  And He took them up in His 
arms, put His hands on them and blessed them."
 
That is sufficient to show clearly that babies are brought into 
this world pure and sinless.  God's kingdom is to be filled with the 
quality one finds in children.  That means that the kingdom of God must 
be filled with those who trust and love the Lord -- not those born in 
sin.
 
Another passage clearly refutes the absurd notion that children 
come into the world guilty of the sins of someone else.  Listen: 
"The soul who sins shall die.  The son shall not (did you get that 
friends?) shall not (I repeat) bear the guilt of the father, nor the 
father bear the guilt of the son.  The righteousness of the righteous 
shall be upon himself, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon 
himself" (Ezekiel 18:20.
 
There is a good story that helps explain all of this.  It happened 
to a man named Alexander Campbell.  He was a young man preaching in 
Virginia in the early 1800's and was trying to restore, to the best of 
His ability, the preaching and practices of Christ and His apostles.  He 
determined not to  be bound by  z84 human disciplines and creeds, just 
by the Bible itself.  He was challenged by a Baptist preacher to 
publicly debate the issue of infant baptism.  At the time he was a 
member of the Presbyterian church.  The Presbyterians adopted the 
practice of infant baptism being performed by sprinkling water on the 
child a long time before that and Campbell has accepted it without 
question.  Campbell quickly signed the propositions to defend the 
Presbyterian practice of infant baptism by sprinkling.  The debate, 
however, never was held.  Mr. Campbell went to the Bible to find some 
scriptural justification for the practice and found none.  In addition 
he found no basis for it since he learned quickly that the Bible does 
not teach that all children are born in sin.
  
Not long after that he and his wife were blessed by the birth of 
their first child.  He now had to decide personally.  What should they 
do?  Should they have the child baptized?  After a long study of the 
problem they concluded that it would not be done.  This led them to a 
further conclusion.  If the baby could not be scripturally baptized, why 
had the church begun the practice?  They learned that the underlying 
basis for infant baptism was this false idea that babies are born 
tainted with an imaginary "Adamic Nature."  Thus, they rejected the 
entire thing.  But that led to another conclusion.  If the baby did not 
need baptism, and since both he and his wife had been sprinkled as 
babies, then they in fact had not been scripturally baptized.  So, they 
resolved it by both being immersed in water for the remission of sins. 
Many have long since given this view of infant damnation by 
inherited total depravity up.  Yet they retain the practice of infant 
baptism in the form of sprinkling.  It is called "Christening" a child.  
There is no Bible authority at all for it.  Hopefully it also will be 
abandoned and all of us will return to the Bible for all that we 
believe, preach, and practice. 

If you have a question about anything said on this program, please 
let us know.  Our mailing address is 1609 Parkside Drive, Bowling Green, 
KY. 42101.  Thank you for listening.  Make it back here next Sunday at 8 
a.m. and we will meet you again.  May God bless you -- and goodbye.
Radio Sermon No. 28 
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