by jimwalton » Wed Aug 22, 2018 4:11 pm
We do believe that the Bible gives evidence that babies/young children who die go to heaven. But your premise ("If a mother truly cares about her children wouldn't it be pragmatic to kill them and guarantee their spot in heaven before they could sin, sacrificing your own spot in heaven?") is horrific.
You're taking (r inquiring about) the position called Consequentialism (utilitarianism): the consequences provide the ultimate basis for determining what's right and wrong in each situation. The problem with Consequentialism is that sometimes the means can be horrifically wrong in an attempt to reach a possibly uncertain outcome.
Principles of this sort can have some pretty awful results. Suppose the greatest happiness of the greatest number or the highest amount of net preference satisfaction involved disregarding the interests of a minority, even to the point of enslaving them or killing them? This isn't the only objection to utilitarianism, but it’s an important and I believe a fatal one.
That’s not a moral principle, it's the abandonment of morality. The idea that the ends are what make the means right applies to the adoption of means too. So if the end is the greatest happiness for the greatest number, any means you adopt have to be consistent with that. If the ends are maximizing net satisfaction of preferences (and note that this treats racist, sexist, exploitative preferences as on a par with compassionate and loving ones) the means can't be inconsistent with that. They have to pass the test too.
While we believe that babies/young children who die go to heaven because the Bible hints at such, and while we believe that God is just and isn't going to punish people for things they didn't know and didn't do (the Bible is clear about that), your proposition to slaughter babies to guarantee their position in heaven as an act of care (presumably compassion), is a horrific and untenable one. Salvation is not (and never was) meant to be secured by slaughter, so this entire thought is a distortion.
Instead we generally take a deontological viewpoint: The rightness or wrongness of an act derives from the action itself and not from the consequence of the act. If a person considers himself to be ethical, then he should be ethical at all times without exceptions. It is very strange for someone who claims to have high moral standards and strict ethical rules to engage in what can be considered to be dubious behavior in order to achieve a greater good. They are more likely to look for other solutions to the issue that don’t conflict with their value system.
It is very hard to justify an unethical act by stating that the goodness of the outcome outweighs any wrongdoing. No excuse can make a morally wrong decision a right one. Taking an unethical step to solve a problem makes a person just as guilty and immoral as the original wrongdoer.
What we know specifically is that the Bible in this case is not crystal clear about the ends, but it is about the means (while believe it, when it comes right down to it, we are making an inference). Romans 6.1-2: “Should we sin so grace can abound? God forbid.” Secondly, God hates the shedding of innocent blood (Dt. 19.10; Ps. 72.12-14; Prov. 31.8-9). We behave in a godly way and follow the commands of the Bible and the example of Jesus. It's a lifestyle of values and ethics based on principles and a relationship with God, not on rules, pragmatism, or consequentialism.
Aldous Huxley said that good ends can be achieved only by the employment of appropriate means. The end cannot justify the means for the simply and obvious reason that the means employed determine the nature of the end product.
Wilhelm Reich: "You think the end justifies the means, however vile. I tell you: the end is the means by which you achieve it. Today’s step is tomorrow’s life. Great ends cannot be obtained by base means. You’ve proved that in all your social upheavals. The meanness and inhumanity of the means make you mean and inhuman and make the end unattainable."