I don't know much about any religion. I don't know if this belief is the general belief for most/all Lutherans. My grandfather prides himself in being a very staunch Lutheran. One of his beliefs is that anyone who is not baptized will go straight to hell when they die. This includes babies who die in the womb, babies who are born stillborn, or babies who are born alive and die very shortly afterword without time to be baptized.
My mom and I got into a discussion about my grandfather and grandmother (my dad's parents.) My mom is convinced that my grandmother is the "worst" of the two for a lot of reasons. She is mean and nasty, she will purposely go out of her way to do things to annoy/anger my grandfather, she will try to prevent my grandfather from doing things that she doesn't approve of, she is never happy no matter what is given to or done for her. She is a miserable person. However, I countered that all of that does not compare to the fact that my grandfather can so faithfully believe that an unborn child is going to hell for all eternity simply because it was not baptized. To me, that kind of thinking is absolutely sickening. I don't care what your religion says.
My mom argued that if I thought my grandfather was bad because of that, then I thought all Lutherans were bad, because my grandfather's beliefs are religious based and all Lutherans have that same belief. I'm not sure if she was admitting that she believes it, too, because she is, or at least used to be, Lutheran herself.
Anyway, I'm curious what others think. Are there any Lutherans on the board? If so, is this really a common belief among Lutherans? And if it is, can someone please explain to me how people, or any God, can justify sending an unborn child to hell because they weren't baptized? Like I said, I do not know much about any religion. What I know about Lutheran, including everything I said here, I got from my family and their... "version" of Lutheran beliefs. I have learned to only believe about a fourth of what comes out of any of my family members' mouths, because most of it is exaggerated, skewed, or outright lies. I've never been to church (well, I think I was a couple of times when I was really young, but I don't remember it) and I've only read a few things out of the Bible, again, most of which I don't remember.
My mom and I got into a discussion about my grandfather and grandmother (my dad's parents.) My mom is convinced that my grandmother is the "worst" of the two for a lot of reasons. She is mean and nasty, she will purposely go out of her way to do things to annoy/anger my grandfather, she will try to prevent my grandfather from doing things that she doesn't approve of, she is never happy no matter what is given to or done for her. She is a miserable person. However, I countered that all of that does not compare to the fact that my grandfather can so faithfully believe that an unborn child is going to hell for all eternity simply because it was not baptized. To me, that kind of thinking is absolutely sickening. I don't care what your religion says.
My mom argued that if I thought my grandfather was bad because of that, then I thought all Lutherans were bad, because my grandfather's beliefs are religious based and all Lutherans have that same belief. I'm not sure if she was admitting that she believes it, too, because she is, or at least used to be, Lutheran herself.
Anyway, I'm curious what others think. Are there any Lutherans on the board? If so, is this really a common belief among Lutherans? And if it is, can someone please explain to me how people, or any God, can justify sending an unborn child to hell because they weren't baptized? Like I said, I do not know much about any religion. What I know about Lutheran, including everything I said here, I got from my family and their... "version" of Lutheran beliefs. I have learned to only believe about a fourth of what comes out of any of my family members' mouths, because most of it is exaggerated, skewed, or outright lies. I've never been to church (well, I think I was a couple of times when I was really young, but I don't remember it) and I've only read a few things out of the Bible, again, most of which I don't remember.
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