Xeno.of.athens
I will give you the keys of the Kingdom of heaven.
Okay, let me get this in chronological order.There is only salvation by grace/ mercy/Love/ Charity/ Forgiveness throughout time.
You asked:
"Why do Catholics see the need to baptize babies, if it is not to escape the punishment for someone's sins or do they sin?"
to which I replied: "So that infants can be born from above as Jesus taught Nicodemus: ""Amen, amen, I say to you, unless one has been reborn by water and the Holy Spirit, he is not able to enter into the kingdom of God." John 3:5"
then you replied: "Jesus said this prior to the Christian dispensation and to a Jew, so was He teaching baby baptism at this time?
Did John the Baptist teach baby baptism?
Did Jews baptize their baby girls and boys at this time?
Why was Nicodemus not already baptized if Jews were doing it?"
and I observed that: "He also taught salvation by grace, to the same Jew, at the same time; is that problematic?"
and you say, among other things: "NO!!! There is only salvation by grace/ mercy/Love/ Charity/ Forgiveness throughout time."
with which I am in agreement. We've begun to stray from the question you asked at the start, it is my fault. I need to clarify the reason for my last reply. So, here goes.Why do Catholic baptise infants? We do it because it is through baptism that God gives salvation. Salvation being a grace, a gift that the receiver does not earn, nor deserve as a reward for things done, nor for doctrines believed, nor for faith invested.
[Catholics do not believe that a splash of water on a baby's head with some words from scripture said as the splashes are performed earns or 'magically' saves the baby,
Catholics believe that God saves the infant. And Catholics baptise infants because of apostolic example, and because of the meaning of baptism which Jesus explained to Nicodemus, and which is further explained by the apostles in their writings, as well as in saint Pau's letters.]
So, Catholics believe that baptism saves and has nothing whatever to do with babies sinning or not. What it saves from is the consequences of fallen human nature, which is: - the liability to death,
- separation from the eternal-life, which is in Christ,
- concupiscence (the tendency towards sin and inclination towards rebellion against God),
- and anything else that I haven't mentioned but that ought to be included (my memory is fallible, so I don't claim to be defining Catholic theology exhaustively here)
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