Abstract
This essay examines the doctrine that Adamic inheritance makes every human person personally guilty unto damnation before any personal transgression. That construct has fed infant damnation anxiety, sacramental terror, and distorted views of mankind, sin, baptism, childhood, and the justice of God.
The question is not whether Adam sinned. He did. It is not whether sin entered the world through him. It did. It is not whether death came through sin. Scripture says it did. It is not whether mankind is mortal, corruptible, and universally in need of Christ. Scripture teaches all these things.
The narrower question is this:
Does Scripture teach inherited mortality and corruption from Adam, or inherited personal guilt unto damnation apart from personal sin?
The prophetic witness is direct:
"The sinning person himself shall die;—the son shall not bear the faults of the father,—and the father shall not bear the faults of the son. The goodness of the good shall be on him, and the wickedness of the wicked be upon himself."
— Ezekiel 18:20, FFT
The commandment of justice is also direct:
"You shall not kill parents on account of their children; nor children on account of their parents. A man shall only be put to death for his own crimes."
— Deuteronomy 24:16, FFT
Therefore the inherited-guilt construct must be tested carefully. Scripture may not be forced to deny Adam's headship, universal mortality, corruption, death's reign, or the need for Christ. But neither may Adam's headship be inflated into a doctrine that assigns personal damnable guilt to a child before personal sin, if Scripture does not establish that claim.
The question is not whether man is born into death. He is.
The question is whether God condemns each person as personally guilty of Adam's act before that person has knowingly sinned.
Preface: A Grave Inheritance, But Not an Invented Terror
There are doctrines that become terrifying not because Scripture speaks them clearly, but because inherited systems press one truth beyond its appointed place. Adam's sin is such a truth. Scripture teaches that Adam's transgression brought death. It teaches that mankind is born outside Eden, barred from the Tree of Lives, subject to corruption, and in universal need of Christ. These are grave realities. They must not be weakened.
But from these truths another claim is often constructed: that every child is born personally guilty of Adam's act, damned before personal transgression, and in need of an ecclesiastical mechanism to remove inherited guilt before moral action is possible. This doctrine is not merely theoretical. It has tormented parents, darkened the view of children, magnified sacramental fear, and made God's justice appear to condemn persons for a deed they did not do.
The aim of this essay is not to soften sin. It is not to deny corruption. It is not to minimize death. It is not to remove the need for Christ. It is to ask whether Scripture itself teaches inherited personal damnable guilt apart from personal sin.
The distinction matters.
A person may inherit death without being personally guilty of Adam's hand reaching toward the tree. A child may be born into a world of corruption without bearing the father's fault as his own crime. A descendant may suffer consequence without being personally culpable for the ancestor's act. Scripture knows all these distinctions. It teaches corporate consequence and personal justice. It teaches Adam's headship and the soul's accountability. It teaches death through Adam and judgment according to deeds.
Faithful doctrine must hold all of this together.
I. The Claim Under Examination
The claim under examination may be stated plainly:
It is claimed that because Adam sinned, every human person is born personally guilty before God with Adam's guilt, and therefore stands under damnable condemnation before any personal transgression, knowledge, choice, deed, or refusal of God.
This claim must be distinguished from several truths Scripture does teach.
Scripture teaches that Adam transgressed. Scripture teaches that sin entered the world through one man. Scripture teaches that death entered through sin. Scripture teaches that death passed into all men. Scripture teaches that death reigned from Adam to Moses. Scripture teaches that in Adam all die. Scripture teaches that all sin. Scripture teaches that man is mortal, corruptible, and in universal need of Christ. Scripture teaches that Christ alone brings righteousness, life, resurrection, and redemption.
These truths must be retained.
The target is not Adamic headship. The target is not the universal need for Christ. The target is not the reality of sin in the human condition. The target is the added claim that inherited Adamic mortality necessarily equals inherited personal damnable guilt before personal sin.
To say that all men inherit mortality from Adam is one thing. To say that all men are born into a corrupted and dying condition is one thing. To say that every soul needs Christ is one thing. But to say that a child is personally guilty of Adam's act, and damned as a sinner before personal transgression, is another thing. That claim must be established by Scripture, not assumed by system.
II. What Must Not Be Denied
A faithful prosecution must not overcorrect. Scripture speaks with great severity about Adam, sin, death, and mankind's condition.
Paul writes:
"Because, as by one man sin entered the world, and through the sin the death, and thus death passed into all men, supposing indeed that all sin:"
— Romans 5:12, FFT
He continues:
"However, death reigned from Adam to Moses, and over those who did not sin after the manner of the transgression of Adam, who was a type of the future."
— Romans 5:14, FFT
And again:
"For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all will be revived."
— I Corinthians 15:22, FFT
These witnesses must stand. Death exists by man. Death reigns. Adam is a type. In Adam all die. Christ is the answer.
Therefore this article does not teach innocence as immortality. It does not teach that children are outside the need of Christ. It does not teach that mortality is harmless. It does not teach that inherited corruption is unreal. It does not teach an easy optimism about mankind.
It teaches only that Scripture must not be pressed beyond what it says. The inherited-guilt construct must show where Scripture turns inherited mortality into personal damnable guilt before personal transgression.
III. Adam's Sin Brought Mortality, Exile, and Death
Genesis records the command given to Adam:
"And the LORD GOD instructed the man, saying, 'For food you may eat of the whole of the trees of the Garden;
but from the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, you shall not eat; because in the day you eat from it dying you shall die.'"
— Genesis 2:16-17, FFT
The penalty is death: "dying you shall die." After the transgression, the sentence comes upon Adam:
"Then to Adam He said, 'Because you have listened to the voice of your wife, and have eaten of the tree of which I commanded you, saying, "Eat not of it;" I will set the ground apart for your cultivation; in sorrow you shall eat from it every day of your life.
It shall grow thorns and briars for you; but you shall have the plants of the field for food.
In the sweat of your brow you shall eat bread, until you return to the ground, from which you were taken. For dust you are, and to the dust you shall return.'"
— Genesis 3:17-19, FFT
The result is a changed condition of life: sorrow, toil, curse upon the ground, and return to dust. Man is then expelled from the Garden lest he take from the Tree of Lives:
"The LORD GOD also said, 'Now the man was like one of Ourselves, acquainted with both good and evil; therefore it may be that he will stretch out his hand, and take also of the Tree of Lives and eat of it, and live forever.'
The EVER-LIVING GOD consequently expelled him from the Garden of Eden, in order to cultivate the ground from which he was taken.
So He drove out the man, and He stationed at the east of the Garden of Eden the Divine Watchers, with the flaming sword to guard the path to the Tree of Lives."
— Genesis 3:22-24, FFT
This is the foundation of Adamic inheritance: mortality, toil, exile from the Tree of Lives, and a dying condition into which Adam's descendants are born.
But Genesis does not say that each descendant is personally guilty of Adam's act as his own crime. It does not say that every child is judicially damned before personal transgression. It does not say that infants are condemned for Adam's hand reaching toward the tree. It says that Adam returns to dust and that the path to the Tree of Lives is guarded.
The inheritance is terrible. It is death. But the text must be allowed to say what it says, and not more than it says.
IV. Scripture Knows Inherited Corruption
Scripture does not present mankind as morally untouched by Adam's fall. It speaks plainly of corruption, passion, weakness, and the deep disorder of the human condition.
Before the flood:
"And the EVER-LIVING saw that the sin of man increased upon the earth, and that every effort of the thought of his heart was to promote sin every day."
— Genesis 6:5, FFT
After the flood, the Lord says:
"Never again will I curse the ground to the labour of man, although the thought of the heart of man is wickedness from his youth; and never again will I cut off every animal I have made."
— Genesis 8:21, FFT
David laments:
"Alas! I was born with this passion,
And my mother conceived me for sin."
— The Psalms 51:5, FFT
Job speaks of the frailty and impurity of man:
"Man-who is born of a woman,—
For a few days, and those full of grief,"
— Book of Job 14:1, FFT
And:
"To whom is it given to be pure?—
Not one can exist without stain!"
— Book of Job 14:4, FFT
These witnesses must be retained. Man is not born into Eden. He is born into mortality, passion, corruption, weakness, and a world already invaded by sin and death. The heart of man bends toward wickedness from youth. The human condition is not neutral, immortal, or self-redeeming.
But the question remains: does Scripture identify this inherited condition with personal guilt for Adam's act before personal sin?
It does not follow automatically. Corruption is not identical to personal culpability. Mortality is not identical to damnable guilt. A bent nature is not the same thing as a personally committed transgression. These categories must not be confused.
Scripture can teach inherited mortality and corruption without teaching inherited personal guilt as damnation.
V. The Soul That Sins Shall Die
Ezekiel 18 is the central prophetic witness against inherited guilt as personal condemnation.
The proverb under judgment says:
"'The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge?'"
— Ezekiel 18:2, FFT
The Lord rejects the proverb:
"By My life," says the Mighty Lord, "you need never again quote that proverb in Israel!"
— Ezekiel 18:3, FFT
Then comes the rule:
"Look! all persons are Mine! both the person of the father and the person of the son, are mine:—therefore the sinning person shall die!"
— Ezekiel 18:4, FFT
The Lord later states the rule still more fully:
"The sinning person himself shall die;—the son shall not bear the faults of the father,—and the father shall not bear the faults of the son. The goodness of the good shall be on him, and the wickedness of the wicked be upon himself."
— Ezekiel 18:20, FFT
This is not obscure. The son shall not bear the faults of the father. The father shall not bear the faults of the son. The wickedness of the wicked shall be upon himself.
This does not deny consequences across generations. Scripture often shows that children suffer in a world damaged by the sins of fathers. But suffering consequence is not the same as bearing personal guilt. A son may inherit a broken house, a wounded body, a corrupt culture, a mortal condition, and a world under death. But Ezekiel forbids turning inherited consequence into the son's personal fault.
The inherited-guilt construct must therefore answer Ezekiel. If the son does not bear the faults of the father, where does Scripture say the son bears Adam's fault as his own personal guilt before transgression?
Ezekiel's rule is not that the innocent are outside mortality. The rule is that guilt is personal: "the sinning person shall die."
VI. Each Man for His Own Crime
Moses gives the same principle in legal form:
"You shall not kill parents on account of their children; nor children on account of their parents. A man shall only be put to death for his own crimes."
— Deuteronomy 24:16, FFT
The principle is repeated in the history of Amaziah:
"but he did not kill their children, for it is written in the Book of the Laws of Moses, as the EVER-LIVING commanded, expressly:—'You shall not kill the fathers on account of their children; nor the children on account of their fathers; but each man shall be put to death for his own crime.'"
— Second Book of Chronicles 25:4, FFT
This principle belongs to justice. Each man is put to death for his own crime. Fathers are not executed for children; children are not executed for fathers.
The inherited-guilt construct must be tested here. If Scripture's justice forbids putting the child to death for the father's crime, then the doctrine that God damns the child personally for Adam's crime must produce direct Scriptural warrant. It cannot simply be inferred from inherited mortality.
One may say, "Adam's sin brought death upon all." Scripture says that. One may say, "All men need Christ." Scripture says that. One may say, "All sin." Scripture says that. But to say, "A child is personally damnably guilty of Adam's act before personal transgression" must be proved, not assumed.
VII. Romans 5: The Passage That Must Be Handled Carefully
Romans 5 is often treated as the strongest proof of inherited guilt. It must therefore be handled with great care. The passage is strong, but it must not be made to say less or more than it says.
Paul writes:
"Because, as by one man sin entered the world, and through the sin the death, and thus death passed into all men, supposing indeed that all sin:"
— Romans 5:12, FFT
This sentence clearly teaches that sin entered through one man, and death through sin. Death passed into all men. Yet Fenton's wording also refuses to detach the spread of death from the reality that "all sin."
Paul continues:
"for law was in the world before sin, for sin would not be charged if a law did not exist.
However, death reigned from Adam to Moses, and over those who did not sin after the manner of the transgression of Adam, who was a type of the future."
— Romans 5:13-14, FFT
This must be retained. Death reigned even over those who did not sin after the manner of Adam's transgression. Adam's act has universal consequence. Death is not merely the result of each person repeating Adam's exact act. Adam is a head. His transgression matters for all.
But notice the form of the consequence: Paul says death reigned. He does not here say each person personally committed Adam's act. He does not say infants consciously transgressed in Adam. He does not say the child bears Adam's fault as his own. He says death reigned even over those whose sin was not like Adam's transgression.
The reign of death is the key. Adam's sin opened the death-realm into which all are born. Christ opens the life-realm into which the redeemed are brought.
Paul then contrasts Adam and Christ:
"But the free gift, however, is not like the transgression. For if from the sin of this one the many died, much more the gift of God and the endowment with that gift of the other Man, Jesus Christ, will overflow to the many."
— Romans 5:15, FFT
The phrase is not weak: "from the sin of this one the many died." Adam's sin carries death to the many. But Paul's emphasis is not finally Adam's ruin; it is Christ's overflowing gift.
Paul continues:
"And that gift is not as it would be with a single sinner; for out of the guilt of the one came condemnation; but by the gift from the other came rectification from many transgressions."
— Romans 5:16, FFT
Here the inherited-guilt advocate will press hardest: "out of the guilt of the one came condemnation." This must not be evaded. Condemnation came from the guilt of the one. Adam's act was not private in consequence.
But the sentence itself distinguishes the two sides. From the one came condemnation; from the other came rectification from many transgressions. Paul is contrasting representative consequence in Adam with overflowing rectification in Christ. He is not saying that every descendant has personally performed Adam's act. He is saying that Adam's guilt brought a condemning consequence into the human realm, just as Christ's gift brings rectification beyond many transgressions.
The next verse identifies the form of Adam's consequence:
"For if, by the transgression of that one, death reigned through that one, how much rather will those receiving the abundant gift and endowment of righteousness reign in life through that other, Jesus Christ?"
— Romans 5:17, FFT
Again, the repeated category is reign. Death reigned through the one. Life reigns through the other. Paul is describing two dominions: the death-realm in Adam and the life-realm in Christ.
Then comes the difficult summary:
"Since, therefore, by transgression of the one, condemnation came upon all men; thus also by righteousness of the other, righteousness of life is brought to all men."
— Romans 5:18, FFT
This must be allowed its force. Condemnation came upon all men by the transgression of the one. But the same sentence says that righteousness of life is brought to all men by the righteousness of the other. The interpreter must not absolutize the Adam half in a way he refuses to apply to the Christ half. If "condemnation came upon all men" is read as automatic personal damnation of every infant before personal sin, then "righteousness of life is brought to all men" must be handled with equal care.
Paul's structure is representative and realm-defining. Adam brings the death-condemnation into which all are born. Christ brings the righteousness of life that alone overcomes it.
Paul concludes:
"For as by the disobedience of that one man the many were made sinners, so by the obedience of the other the many will be constituted righteous.
But a law intervened, so that the transgression might be obvious; yet, where the sin exceeded, the gift went far beyond it.
So that as sin reigned with death, thus also the gift should reign through righteousness, to eternal life, by our Lord Jesus Christ."
— Romans 5:19-21, FFT
The governing categories are now unmistakable: disobedience and obedience, the many made sinners and the many constituted righteous, sin reigning with death and the gift reigning through righteousness to eternal life.
Romans 5 therefore establishes Adamic headship, universal death, condemnation in Adam's realm, the reign of sin and death, and the surpassing necessity of Christ. It does not require the additional claim that a child is personally damnably guilty of Adam's act before personal transgression.
Paul's purpose is not to construct infant damnation. His purpose is to magnify Christ as the answer to Adam: the gift overflows, rectification comes through Christ, and grace reigns through righteousness to eternal life.
VIII. Condemnation in Adam's Death-Realm Is Not the Same as Personal Culpability
The distinction now becomes necessary.
Scripture clearly teaches that all mankind is born under the consequence of Adam: mortality, exclusion from Eden, death's reign, corruptible flesh, and universal need of Christ. This may rightly be called condemnation in Adam's realm, because mankind is born under the death-sentence that came through Adam's sin.
But condemnation as a realm of death is not identical to personal culpability for Adam's act. A child may be born under death without having personally committed Adam's crime. A person may inherit mortality without bearing the father's fault as his own. A descendant may suffer the consequence of an ancestor's sin without being personally guilty of that ancestor's deed.
This distinction is not invented to soften Paul. It is required by the whole witness of Scripture.
Ezekiel says:
"the son shall not bear the faults of the father"
— Ezekiel 18:20, FFT
Deuteronomy says:
"A man shall only be put to death for his own crimes."
— Deuteronomy 24:16, FFT
Paul says:
"for sin would not be charged if a law did not exist."
— Romans 5:13, FFT
And again:
"Yet where there is no law, there is no transgression of it."
— Romans 4:15, FFT
He also says:
"For, disconnected from law, sin is non-existent.
But I lived then without a law; however, on the command arriving, again sin revived, but I died."
— Romans 7:8-9, FFT
These texts do not deny Adam. They clarify culpability. Sin is charged in relation to law. Transgression is not spoken where no law is present. Paul's own account of command, sin, and death shows that personal culpability is bound up with the encounter between command and the sinner.
Therefore the inherited-guilt construct must not blur all categories into one. Adam's sin brought death. Death passed to all. Death reigned. All are born into the dying condition. All need Christ. But personal guilt is still tied to sin, law, knowledge, deed, and moral accountability.
The soul that sins shall die. The son shall not bear the father's fault. Each is judged according to his own deeds.
IX. The Adam-Christ Parallel Must Not Be Flattened
The Adam-Christ parallel is real, but it must not be flattened.
Paul does not present Adam as a mere private individual. Adam is a type of the future. Adam's sin affects the many. Death reigns through the one. Condemnation comes upon all men through the transgression of the one. The many are made sinners by the disobedience of the one.
All of that must be confessed.
But Paul also does not present Christ as a mere private individual. Christ's righteousness affects the many. The gift overflows to the many. Those receiving the abundant gift reign in life. Righteousness of life is brought to all men. The many will be constituted righteous. The gift reigns through righteousness to eternal life.
If Adam's headship is used to teach automatic personal damnation apart from personal sin, then the Christ side of Paul's parallel becomes difficult. Does Christ's obedience automatically make every person personally righteous apart from receiving Him? Paul's own wording resists such a simplification, because he speaks of "those receiving the abundant gift and endowment of righteousness."
Thus the parallel must be handled as Paul handles it. Adam introduces sin, death, and condemnation into the human realm; Christ introduces righteousness, life, and rectification. Adam's act brings death's reign; Christ's act brings the gift that reigns to eternal life. Every man is born into Adam's death-realm; every man needs Christ's life-realm.
But personal culpability and personal rectification must still be handled according to the whole witness: sin, faith, repentance, deeds, judgment, and union with Christ.
Romans 5 magnifies Christ over Adam. It does not authorize a doctrine that uses Adam to damn infants while using Christ less broadly than Paul's own parallel allows.
X. Law, Knowledge, and Moral Accountability
The inherited-guilt construct often treats guilt as purely automatic: Adam sinned, therefore the child is personally guilty before knowing good from evil, before command is understood, before moral action is possible, and before any deed has been done. Scripture's language concerning law, knowledge, and accountability is more careful.
Paul writes:
"For whoever sins without a law shall perish without a law; and whoever sins under a law shall be condemned by a law;
for the listeners to law are not righteous in the sight of God; but those who practice law will be righteous."
— Romans 2:12-13, FFT
He then shows that even nations without the Mosaic Law can be accountable through conscience:
"For when a nation not possessing the law practices the demands of the law naturally, they, not having a law, are a law to themselves;
they furnish proof of the effect of the law recorded in their hearts, their conscience attesting, and their reflections condemning or approving mutually,
in the day when God will judge the secrets of men, according to my good news through Jesus Christ."
— Romans 2:14-16, FFT
This witness avoids two errors at once. It does not say that only those under the written Mosaic Law can sin. Gentiles have conscience. Their reflections condemn or approve. God judges the secrets of men. But neither does it present judgment as detached from moral knowledge, conscience, action, and accountability.
Paul's language is not mechanical inherited guilt. It is moral judgment. Men sin with or without the Mosaic Law, and God judges truly. But the judgment is still bound to sin, conscience, secrets, action, and the righteous judgment of God.
Romans 7 adds another layer:
"No! on the contrary, I should not have comprehended the sin, except by means of a law; and I should not have known what the lust was, if the law had not said, 'You shall not lust.'
But sin, having taken a basis of operations against that command, incited every lust in me. For, disconnected from law, sin is non-existent.
But I lived then without a law; however, on the command arriving, again sin revived, but I died."
— Romans 7:7-9, FFT
This does not mean that man is holy apart from command. Paul has already taught inherited death and universal sin. But it does show that personal culpability is bound up with command, knowledge, awakened sin, and death through sin. "On the command arriving, again sin revived, but I died."
Thus Scripture knows a distinction between inherited death-condition and personal culpability under command. The child born into Adam's mortality is not thereby shown to have personally transgressed Adam's command. The sinner who encounters command and transgresses becomes personally culpable for his own sin.
This article does not build an artificial "age of accountability" with a number Scripture does not give. But it may say what Scripture says: there is a moral difference between those who know neither good nor evil and those who knowingly rebel; between inherited consequence and personal fault; between being born under death and being judged for deeds.
XI. Children, Knowledge, and the Mercy of God
Scripture speaks of children with a tenderness that inherited-damnation systems often obscure.
In Deuteronomy, the children of the wilderness generation are distinguished from their unbelieving fathers:
"But your infants whom you said would be captured; and your sons who to-day know neither good nor evil,—they shall go there and I will give it to them, and they shall possess it."
— Deuteronomy 1:39, FFT
The children are not treated as personally guilty of the parents' rebellion. They are described as those who "know neither good nor evil," and they enter the land their fathers forfeited.
Isaiah also recognizes a developmental distinction:
"He will eat butter and honey when he learns how to distinguish between bad and good.
Yet before he the lad knows to distinguish between bad and good, the Country that you oppose will be deprived of both her Kings!"
— Isaiah 7:15-16, FFT
The text is not a systematic doctrine of childhood accountability, but it does recognize the category of learning to distinguish between bad and good. Scripture is not blind to moral development.
Jonah gives another witness to divine mercy toward those lacking discernment:
"Therefore, should not I have pity for Ninevah,—that Great City, which has in it more than ten times twelve thousand of mankind who do not know their right hand from their left, besides multitudes of animals?"
— Jonah 4:11, FFT
Again, this must be used carefully. Jonah is not a treatise on inherited guilt. But the Lord Himself appeals to the presence of those who do not know their right hand from their left as part of His pity for the city. Lack of discernment matters to God.
Christ's words are still more tender:
"Jesus, however, said, 'Allow the little ones, and do not prevent their coming to Me; for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.'"
— Matthew 19:14, FFT
Mark records:
"Allow the little children to come to Me, and do not prevent them; for of such is the Kingdom of God."
— Mark 10:14, FFT
Luke records:
"Allow the little children to come to Me, and hinder them not; for of such consists the Kingdom of God."
— Luke 18:16, FFT
Christ also places a child in the midst of His disciples and says:
"I tell you indeed, that if you do not turn back, and become like those children, you will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven.
Whoever therefore may humble himself like this child, he is the most exalted in the Kingdom of Heaven."
— Matthew 18:3-4, FFT
And He warns:
"See that you do not slight one of these little ones;"
— Matthew 18:10, FFT
Then:
"In the same way, it is the wish of My Father Who is in heaven that not one of these little ones should be destroyed."
— Matthew 18:14, FFT
These passages do not teach that children are immortal apart from Christ. They do not teach that they need no Savior. Christ is the one receiving them. But they directly oppose a theology that treats children primarily as personally damned bearers of Adam's guilt. Christ does not say, "Keep them back until sacrament rescues them from inherited damnation." He says, "Allow the little children to come to Me," and "of such is the Kingdom."
The faithful must be careful. We should not build a sentimental doctrine of childhood innocence that denies the need for Christ. But neither should we build a terror-doctrine that Christ's own words do not support. The children are brought to Him. He receives them. The Kingdom is spoken of in relation to such as these.
XII. David's Child and the Limits of Inference
The death of David's child is often raised in discussions of infants and hope. David says:
"But now he has died,—why should I grieve? Am I ever able to bring him back to me? I shall go to him, but he will not return to me!"
— II Samuel 12:23, FFT
This text should be handled with restraint. It gives David's sober confession that he will go to the child, while the child will not return to him. It may offer pastoral comfort. It may support hope. But it should not be made to carry more than it says.
This article does not need to settle every question about the eternal state of every child. Its task is narrower: to reject the imposed doctrine that children are personally damned for Adam's guilt before personal sin, where Scripture has not imposed that terror.
The faithful may hope in the mercy and justice of God. They may bring children to Christ. They may trust that the Judge of all the earth does right. But they should not create doctrines beyond the written witness, either sentimental certainty where Scripture is silent or terror where Scripture has not spoken.
XIII. Judgment According to Deeds
Scripture repeatedly describes judgment according to works, deeds, actions, ways, or doings.
Paul writes:
"Who will render to everyone what he has done:"
— Romans 2:6, FFT
And:
"suffering and punishment, on every human soul that does evil, whether Jew or Grecian;
but praise, and honour, and peace, to all who do good, whether Jew or Greek;"
— Romans 2:9-10, FFT
Again:
"Therefore each one of us shall give a reason for himself to God."
— Romans 14:12, FFT
Paul also writes:
"For we must all be reviewed before the Judgment-seat of Christ, so that each may receive the reward of what he has done in this body, whether good or bad."
— II Corinthians 5:10, FFT
Christ Himself says:
"Do not be surprised at this; because the time comes, in which all those in the graves shall hear His voice, and shall come out:
those who have done good to a resurrection of life; and those who have done evil to a resurrection of judgment."
— John 5:28-29, FFT
Revelation gives the final judgment scene:
"I also saw the dead, the great and the small, stationed in sight of the throne; and books were opened. And another book was opened, which is that of Life. And the dead were judged according to their actions from the entries in the books."
— Revelation 20:12, FFT
And:
"The sea also delivered up the dead who were in it; and Death and the Grave delivered up the dead who were in them; and each of them was judged according to his doings."
— Revelation 20:13, FFT
These witnesses do not deny Adam's headship. They do not deny inherited death. They do not deny that all need Christ. But they do establish a consistent judgment pattern: each is judged according to his own actions, doings, ways, and what he has done in the body.
If a doctrine teaches that a child is personally damned for Adam's act before any personal deed, it must account for this witness. Scripture repeatedly grounds judgment in what each has done. The inherited-guilt construct must not be allowed to replace judgment according to deeds with damnation according to another man's crime.
XIV. The Sacramental Fear Built Upon Inherited Guilt
One reason this doctrine matters is that inherited guilt as damnation often becomes the hidden engine of sacramental fear. If an infant is personally damned by Adam's guilt before personal sin, then some mechanism must be introduced to remove that guilt. A sacramental system can then present itself as necessary not merely for obedience, covenantal sign, or instruction, but for rescue from inherited damnation.
This is where the doctrine becomes pastorally dangerous.
The question is not whether baptism matters. Scripture commands baptism. The question is whether Scripture teaches that unbaptized infants are personally damned by Adam's guilt unless sacrament removes that guilt. That is a different claim and must be proved.
If the doctrine of inherited personal guilt is unsupported or overinflated, then downstream systems built upon it must be re-examined. Fear must not be used to compel what Scripture does not say. A sacrament must not be made to solve a guilt Scripture has not assigned. The conscience must not be bound where God has not bound it.
The faithful may preach baptism where Scripture commands baptism. They may preach repentance where Scripture commands repentance. They may preach Christ as necessary for all, because Scripture does. But they must not invent a terror regarding infants and then make an institution the rescuer from that terror.
XV. No Speculation Beyond the Witness
This essay must stop where Scripture stops.
It may say that Adam's sin brought death. It may say that all are born into mortality. It may say that man is corruptible and inclined toward sin. It may say that all who sin need rectification from God. It may say that Christ alone brings life, resurrection, righteousness, and redemption. It may say that Scripture does not teach personal damnable guilt for Adam's act before personal sin.
But it must not pretend to know what God has not revealed in detail. It must not build a full map of every child's eternal state. It must not replace inherited-damnation terror with a sentimental system of its own invention. It must not turn pastoral hope into dogmatic overreach.
The proper restraint is this: reject the doctrine Scripture does not teach, and trust the God Scripture reveals.
The Judge of all the earth is righteous. The Son receives little children. The Father does not wish one of these little ones to be destroyed. The soul that sins shall die. The son shall not bear the faults of the father. Each is judged according to his doings. Death came through Adam. Life comes through Christ.
This is enough for faithful doctrine. Where Scripture speaks, we speak. Where Scripture withholds detail, we refuse both terror and presumption.
XVI. What Must Be Retained, Refined, Demoted, and Rejected
Under the method of faithful inference, the verdict should be stated proportionally.
Retain: Adam sinned. Sin entered the world through one man. Death entered through sin. Death passed into all men. Death reigned from Adam to Moses. Condemnation came upon all men through Adam's transgression. In Adam all die. The human condition is mortal, corrupt, and in universal need of Christ. All who sin need rectification from God. Christ alone brings righteousness, life, resurrection, and redemption.
Refine: Adamic inheritance should be described with Scriptural categories: mortality, death's reign, condemnation in Adam's death-realm, corruption, exile from the Tree of Lives, weakness, passion, and universal need. These must not be confused with personal guilt for Adam's act unless Scripture itself makes that equation.
Demote: Claims about inherited guilt as personal damnation before personal transgression must be demoted unless they can survive Ezekiel 18, Deuteronomy 24:16, Christ's treatment of children, the repeated judgment according to deeds, and Paul's own distinction between sin, law, transgression, conscience, and death.
Reject: The doctrine that God personally damns a child for Adam's crime before personal sin must be rejected if it rests on system-pressure rather than direct Scripture. Scripture teaches that the sinning person shall die, that the son shall not bear the faults of the father, that sin is not charged apart from law, and that each is judged according to his own deeds.
XVII. Conclusion: Let Guilt Be Personal and Christ Be Greater
The Scriptures teach a grave Adamic inheritance. Man is born outside Eden, barred from the Tree of Lives, mortal, corruptible, and subject to death. The thought of man's heart bends toward wickedness from youth. Death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those who did not sin after the manner of Adam's transgression. Condemnation came upon all men through Adam. All sin and are in need of rectification from God. Christ is not optional. He is the last Adam, the Life-giving answer to the first.
But Scripture also teaches personal justice. The son shall not bear the faults of the father. A man is put to death for his own crimes. The sinning person shall die. Sin is not charged where law does not exist. Each will give account for himself to God. The dead are judged according to their actions. The little children are received by Christ, and of such is the Kingdom.
Therefore the faithful must distinguish what Scripture distinguishes.
Inherited mortality is scriptural.
Inherited corruption is scriptural.
Universal need for Christ is scriptural.
Condemnation in Adam's death-realm is scriptural.
Death through Adam is scriptural.
Resurrection through Christ is scriptural.
But inherited personal damnable guilt before personal transgression is not established by those truths. It is an inference pressed beyond its warrant when it makes the child personally guilty of the father's sin, and when it turns Adamic mortality into individual damnation before personal sin.
The soul that sins shall die.
The son shall not bear the faults of the father.
Each shall be judged according to his doings.
The children may come to Christ.
In Adam all die.
In Christ all will be revived.
Let the doctrine stop where Scripture stops. Let mortality be mortality. Let corruption be corruption. Let Adam's headship remain grave. Let Christ's victory remain greater. Let sin be sin. Let guilt be personal. Let judgment be righteous. Let Christ be necessary for all. Let no inherited system turn the justice of God into a terror Scripture has not spoken.
The Gospel does not need an invented terror to magnify Christ. Death is terrible enough. Sin is ruinous enough. Corruption is deep enough. Judgment is serious enough. Adam's fall is grave enough.
And Christ is greater still.