Re: before the boy knows enough to reject the wrong and choo
DiscussingTheTopic said:
15 He will be eating curds and honey when he knows enough to reject the wrong and choose the right, 16 for before the boy knows enough to reject the wrong and choose the right, the land of the two kings you dread will be laid waste.
Isaiah 7:15-16 NIV 2010
Do you think this passage has any applications to
1. Young Children
2. Some of the elderly who start to fall under category 3 as they get older
3. Mentally disabled/impaired/handicapped people
4. Whether or not someone goes to "heaven" or "hell" when they die
Hi DiscussingTheTopic,
(1) Yes.
(2) Not really. They've had their chance. They aren't going to blow it when they don't know what they are doing. Their choice to choose good is done and over with by then.
(3) Probably, depending upon whether they know to reject the wrong or choose the right.
(4) Not exactly. This has to do with the knowledge of good and evil, in my opinion.
Nicola thinks it has to do with the righteousness of Christ, but that would suggest then that Jesus didn't innately understand righteousness as God.
"Butter and honey he shall eat until he knows to refuse the evil and choose the good." (Isaiah 7:15)
Butter (actually curdled milk) and honey were the foods given to infants and small children. The implication of this passage is that there is a time at which the human faculties allow them to distinguish between good and evil. This age would be certainly greater than about five years of age for most humans, which is about when the higher brain functions develop, giving them the ability to understand such differences. Prior to that time, good and evil are abstractions--they have no real meaning for little children, and the little children are wholly innocent in their hearts and minds.
For that reason, I answered (1) with a yes. Little children don't go to hell if they die without repentance, because there is nothing for them to repent from. They don't even understand sin at that point. In fact, earlier in Scripture, God only held the ADULT Israelites liable for the sin of complaining against God and wanting to turn back to Egypt. He caused all the adults, 20 years of age and older, to die in the wilderness for their sins, but the "little ones" of 19 years and younger were allowed to go to the Promised Land.
It is my belief that there is no distinct age at which one has the knowledge of good and evil and is responsible for it before God. It begins sometime in early childhood, around 5-7 years of age for most people perhaps, and extends as late as 19 for others. At 20, God cuts it off, offering no excuse to adults who have certainly reached that knowledge by then. (I imagine that the mentally-handicapped would not be treated as adults if they could not think as adults.)
Let me know your thoughts on this...
John for Christ