The Salvation of Little Children - Ensign Apr. 1977
The Salvation of Little Children - Ensign Apr. 1977
The Salvation of Little Children - Ensign Apr. 1977
Among all the glorious gospel verities given of God to his people there is scarcely a doctrine so sweet, so soul
satisfying, and so soul sanctifying, as the one which proclaims—Little children shall be saved. They are alive in Christ
and shall have eternal life. For them the family unit will continue, and the fulness of exaltation is theirs. No blessing
shall be withheld. They shall rise in immortal glory, grow to full maturity, and live forever in the highest heaven of
the celestial kingdom—all through the merits and mercy and grace of the Holy Messiah, all because of the atoning
sacrifice of Him who died that we might live.
One of the great benefits of the recent addition to the Pearl of Great Price of Joseph Smith’s Vision of the Celestial
Kingdom is the opportunity it affords to study anew the doctrine relative to the salvation of children. There are many
valid questions which confront us in this field which are deserving of sound scriptural answers.
Two scenes showing the infinite love, tenderness, and compassion of the Lord Jesus set the stage for our consideration
of the various matters involved in the salvation of children.
The first scene is set in “the coasts of Judea beyond Jordan.” Great multitudes are before him; the Pharisees are
querulous, seeking to entrap; he has just preached about marriage and divorce and the family unit. “Then were there
brought unto him little children,” Matthew records, “that he should put his hands on them and pray. And the disciples
rebuked them, saying, There is no need, for Jesus hath said, Such shall be saved.
“But Jesus said, Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven.
“And he laid hands on them, and departed thence.” (JST, Matt. 19:13–15; italics added.)
The second scene is portrayed on the American continent. That same Jesus, the Compassionate One, risen and
glorified, is ministering among his Nephite kinsmen. He has just prayed as none other had ever done before. “No
tongue can speak, neither can there be written by any man, neither can the hearts of men conceive so great and
marvelous things as we both saw and heard Jesus speak,” the Nephite historian records. (3 Ne. 17:17.)
“And they saw the heavens open, and they saw angels descending out of heaven as it were in the midst of fire; and they
came down and encircled those little ones about, and they were encircled about with fire; and the angels did minister
unto them.” (3 Ne. 17:23–24.)
Jesus loves and blesses children. They are the companions of angels. They shall be saved. Of such is the kingdom of
heaven.
Now let us record brief answers to the more commonly asked questions about the salvation of children.
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Firstborn of the Father, rose to a state of glory and exaltation before he was ever suckled at Mary’s breast.
Thereupon Mormon, speaking by the power of the Holy Ghost, taught that “it is solemn mockery” to baptize little
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children; that they “are alive in Christ from the foundation of the world”; that it is awful wickedness to deny the pure
mercies of Christ to them; that such a belief sets at naught the power of Christ’s redemption; that those who believe
such a false concept are “in the bonds of iniquity” and if cut off while in the thought shall be thrust down to hell; and
that those who humble themselves and repent and are baptized shall “be saved with their little children.” (Moro.
8:8–25.)
It is sometimes asked if this applies to children of all races, and of course the answer is that when the revelation says
all children it means all children. There is no restriction as to race, kindred, or tongue. Little children are little children
and they are all alive in Christ, and all are saved by him, through and because of the atonement.
Speaking of the Prophet’s statement that all children are saved in the celestial kingdom, President Joseph Fielding
Smith said: “This would mean the children of every race. All the spirits that come to this world come from the presence
of God and, therefore, must have been in his kingdom. … Every spirit of man was innocent in the beginning; and all
who rebelled were cast out; therefore, all who remained are entitled to the blessings of the gospel.” (Doctrines of
Salvation, 2:55.)
Abinadi said, “Little children also have eternal life.” (Mosiah 15:25.) Joseph Smith taught, “Children will be enthroned
in the presence of God and the Lamb; … they will there enjoy the fulness of that light, glory, and intelligence, which is
prepared in the celestial kingdom.” (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 200.) President Joseph Fielding Smith
spoke very expressly on this point: “The Lord will grant unto these children the privilege of all the sealing blessings
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which pertain to the exaltation. We were all mature spirits before we were born, and the bodies of little children will
grow after the resurrection to the full stature of the spirit, and all the blessings will be theirs through their obedience,
the same as if they had lived to maturity and received them on the earth. The Lord is just and will not deprive any
person of a blessing, simply because he dies before that blessing can be received. It would be manifestly unfair to
deprive a little child of the privilege of receiving all the blessings of exaltation in the world to come simply because it
died in infancy. … Children who die in childhood will not be deprived of any blessing. When they grow, after the
resurrection, to the full maturity of the spirit, they will be entitled to all the blessings which they would have been
entitled to had they been privileged to tarry here and receive them.” (Doctrines of Salvation, 2:54.)
Why do some children die and others live? Are those who die better off than those
who remain in mortality?
We may rest assured that all things are controlled and governed by Him whose spirit children we are. He knows the
end from the beginning, and he provides for each of us the testings and trials which he knows we need. President
Joseph Fielding Smith once told me that we must assume that the Lord knows and arranges beforehand who shall be
taken in infancy and who shall remain on earth to undergo whatever tests are needed in their cases. This accords with
Joseph Smith’s statement: “The Lord takes many away, even in infancy, that they may escape the envy of man, and the
sorrows and evils of this present world; they were too pure, too lovely, to live on earth.” (Teachings, pp. 196–97.) It is
implicit in the whole scheme of things that those of us who have arrived at the years of accountability need the tests
and trials to which we are subject and that our problem is to overcome the world and attain that spotless and pure
state which little children already possess.
How much do children know before their mortal birth about God and the plan of
salvation?
Every person born into the world comes from the presence of God. We all saw him in that eternal world. We heard his
voice. He taught us his laws. We learned about Christ and chose to follow him when he was chosen to be our Savior
and Redeemer. We understood and knew the gospel plan and shouted for joy at the privilege of getting our mortal
bodies as part of that great plan of salvation. Returning pure and spotless to their Maker, children—who in reality are
adults—will again have that gospel knowledge which once was theirs.
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Accountability does not burst full-bloom upon a child at any given moment in his life. Children become accountable
gradually, over a number of years. Becoming accountable is a process, not a goal to be attained when a specified
number of years, days, and hours have elapsed. In our revelation the Lord says, “They cannot sin, for power is not
given unto Satan to tempt little children, until they begin to become accountable before me.” (D&C 29:47.) There
comes a time, however, when accountability is real and actual and sin is attributed in the lives of those who develop
normally. It is eight years of age, the age of baptism. (D&C 68:27.)
This principle of accountability has been twisted and perverted and even lost at various times. It was at the root of
Mormon’s inquiry to the Lord about infant baptism. (See Moro. 8.) One of our most instructive passages on the point
contains the words spoken by the Lord to Abraham. “My people have gone astray from my precepts, and have not kept
mine ordinances, which I gave unto their fathers,” the Lord said.
“And they have not observed mine anointing, and the burial, or baptism wherewith I commanded them;
“But have turned from the commandment, and taken unto themselves the washing of children, and the blood of
sprinkling.” (JST, Gen. 17:4–6.)
Infant baptism was practiced by some even in those early days. The reason? Men no longer understood the atonement.
For, as the record continues, those ancient peoples “said that the blood of the righteous Abel was shed for sins; and
have not known wherein they are accountable before me.” (JST, Gen. 17:7.)
Then the Lord made this promise to Abraham: “I will establish a covenant of circumcision with thee, and it shall be my
covenant between me and thee, and thy seed after thee, in their generations; that thou mayest know for ever that
children are not accountable before me until they are eight years old.” (JST, Gen. 17:11.)
After revealing that little children are redeemed from the foundation of the world through the atoning sacrifice of Him
who died to save us all, and after specifying that Satan has no power to tempt little children until they begin to become
accountable, the Lord applied the same principles to those who are mentally deficient: “And, again, I say unto you,
that whoso having knowledge, have I not commanded to repent? And he that hath no understanding, it remaineth in
me to do according as it is written.” (D&C 29:49–50.)
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Father’s children. He has entrusted them to us for a time and a season. Our appointment is to bring them up in light
and truth so they will qualify to return to his Eternal Presence.
Parents in Zion have an especial responsibility for the care and well-being of the souls entrusted to them. King
Benjamin summarized it in these words: “Ye will not suffer your children that they go hungry, or naked; neither will ye
suffer that they transgress the laws of God, and fight and quarrel one with another, and serve the devil, who is the
master of sin, or who is the evil spirit which hath been spoken of by our fathers, he being an enemy to all
righteousness.
“But ye will teach them to walk in the ways of truth and soberness; ye will teach them to love one another, and to serve
one another.” (Mosiah 4:14–15; see also D&C 68:25–28.)
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