The Bible doesn't contain several words, but what I posted was him quoting statements about infant baptism. It showed that the dominant Christian church of the time didn't have this "age of accountability" doctrine. So who invented it? That is, in the form that you believe? The way you write, it makes it sound like you did. That you studied the Scripture and "deduced" by "sound" exegesis that this is exactly what the Bible teaches. But I doubt that. So who taught you this doctrine? Your Pastor? You learned it at Bible College? When did it first appear? Do you know? By you saying it doesn't matter how long, makes me think you don't know when it started. So come on, what great theologian put this doctrine all together that all children are not held accountable? You say it is well represented, by whom?
1. You made some point about his being a Catholic makes his words carry more weight. I said that was silly since the bible does not accord the word "Catholic" with any weight. The church spoken about in the bible is the body of believers not any denomination in particular. You might as well have quoted the Gideon's, the Mennonite's, or the Merovingian's. It just adds nothing to say Neo said it, Bruce Lee said it, or even Maimonides. It matters if what they say is constant with scripture, and that is the one place you have no interest in.
2. I have already explained how the innocence of children is an almost universal belief but that with the best intentions some have 2 conflicting ideas and believed in both. There is no harm to having a child baptized and few preachers would refuse. I think it a silly idea personally but when a kid's eternal destiny is on the line I can see why parents would hedge their bets in any way possible. So again infant baptism is practiced by those who also believe children are innocent, plus your probably confusing the dedication of a baby with a sinners baptism in most cases.
3. The children Christ said possessed the kingdom of God were certainly not baptized nor Christians. It was about a 99% chance that they were all Jews and had never heard of baptism.
4. I have never concerned myself with children's status. We can't change or fix it if it is one way and have no need if it is the other. That doctrine was something I found existing in almost all denominations long before I existed and found it consistent with the overall narrative and character of God. I have never heard a sermon on it, never was taught it in Sunday school, never heard it in a debate.
5. I have no need to even have a doctrinal position on this issue. I can't do anything about it. It is God's business from A - Z. I do reject infant baptism but see no harm in it.
6. I don't know, how could I. I only know that it's reverse mangles scripture and makes God into a being totally unlike the descriptions given for him in either testament. My saying it does not matter how long came from the FACT it does not matter. If it did matter I would get very serious about dating it. I can't figure out why it would matter, (actually let me see if you can), what exact date in the past does a doctrine if held then make it a fact?
7. Every reference I find is Gospel based or goes back to David. They don't dwell on what church father introduced the concept. It seems it has been a part of the Christian land scape from the beginning. I can throw out statements of faith like: CCC 1261,
Unitatis redintegratio (#11),
Dei Verbum 8, actually this site probably covers the history of the doctrine beter than most.
The Hope of Salvation for Infants Who Die Without Being Baptised. However I argue to my own satisfaction and that requires scriptural justification not a history of the idea.
Oh, and to go back to when the Jews first started to believe in the resurrection of the dead, in his book Essential Judaism, on page 192, George Robinson says that it dates from the time of the Pharisees and he also says that it might have been an outgrowth from Greek and Persian influences. He mentions a Jewish historian, Louis Jacobs as saying that it became popular during the time of the Maccabees. So I don't think the belief about the resurrection was part of Judaism during David time. So you using David and his dead son doesn't work as a proof text.
Jacobs is one terrible historian. The after life goes back to at least Enoch. Abraham specifically separated being buried with being gathered to his fathers. They are two separate events. The same is true of Ismael, Isaac, Jacob, Aaron, Moses, David, Josiah. Two separate events one a physical burial and two being gathered with their ancestors which has nothing whatever to do with burial anyway. Also the very controversial Necromancer of En-dor. General warnings against those who talk with the death. A psalm by David that says "God will gather from the grave". A prophecy by Daniel that says "those who sleep will be wakened", this is a prophecy the end times. The song of trust in Isaiah. Etc..... times hundreds. You have to leaf through the OT with blinders on to miss this.
1. It was most certainly not a Greek introduction, the Persians were from the same people who were original given the oral traditions so I expect to find common themes in both. However the OT is older than Zoroaster's writings.
2. The Pharisees did not introduce the idea but held a firm position against the Sadducees which made it a public issue.
3. The Maccabees were not orthodox Jews and never invented any OT doctrine. Their "take" is not considered mainstream Jewish and so is not part of this discussion.
Now what I think is probably happening is that your side believes all people have inherited something that separates them from God, no matter what you call it, original sin or what ever, your beliefs make it necessary for someone to accept Jesus to be "saved". Since infants and children that die aren't able to know enough to make that decision, your side needed a loophole. Catholics came up with infant baptism and limbo and who knows what else, you came up with the "age of accountability". So what's the difference? Something in the Bible isn't clear, so people make up stuff. You don't like what they make up, so you went back to the "source", the Bible... and then, made your own stuff up. Oh, I know, why don't you just state what the doctrine of the "age of accountability" is and all the verses you use to deduce it? You don't even have to show me why you think those verses prove it, after all, it should be self-evident.
If I was trying to force something on scripture why am I the only one posting scripture? I have no need of this doctrine. I simply find it an unavoidable deduction from simple scripture and consistent with the over all narrative and God's revealed character. The age of accountability is several doctrines and all go back to pre Christ. The Bat Mitzvah is based on at least one aspect of it for crying out loud. By your logic then you must find the idea of Kids going to heaven so distasteful that you deny clear scripture and instead think dates (of all things) can determine the factuality of the matter without having the slightest idea when this magical date occurred.
1. I do not trust Jewish interpretations about any doctrine. The bible says they are spiritually blind and the OT is a constant record of their failure.
2. I do not trust Catholicism because even they don't trust themselves, and constantly revise what they believe. One Pope claims to be speaking for God while condemning a former Pope who claimed the same.
3. I do not even trust Protestantism entirely because it has the same fatal flaw, us. Only after I find my interpretations agree with another group and my Holy Spirit driven conscience do I consider them valid.
4. But here it is easy because I can find agreement in all three and more importantly more than enough justification in scripture and no counter scriptures to adopt a doctrine I really have no need of.