200 pages--$14.95 (paperback)

Expected ship date is February 1, 2026, pre-publication orders now being accepted


It has been estimated that half of all children born in history died before reaching the age of fifteen. For Christians who believe that man is sinful and depraved, that man is under the condemnation of God, that there is a judgment, that there is a literal heaven and a literal hell, and that salvation is only by faith in Jesus Christ, the question is a natural one: What happens to infants who die?

Are they saved? Are they lost? Are they neither saved nor lost but somewhere in between? Are they innocent? Are they guilty? Are they neither guilty nor innocent but somewhere in between? Are they holy? Are they safe? Do they have to be saved? Do they have to be regenerated to be saved? Do they have to be baptized to be saved? Do they have to be elected to be saved? Do they have to have faith to be saved? Does the faith of their parents have anything to do with it? Do they remain in an infantile state in limbo? Do they just cease to exist? This treatise answers these questions and many more.

The doctrine of infant salvation has been tainted by erroneous notions of infant baptism, covenant theology, original sin, and unconditional election. Although all children dying in infancy are indeed saved, most of the passages of Scripture used to prove their salvation do not prove any such thing and many of them are not even related to the subject at hand.

Infant Salvation: A Historical, Theological, and Biblical Study is an exhaustive study of Church history, theology, and Bible doctrine that is firmly grounded in Scripture instead of speculation, emotion, or tradition. The author is not beholden to any confession of faith, system of theology, faith tradition, or school of interpretation.


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