Obviously the baptism of an infant is more for the mental state of the parents/adult family members and not for the "safety" of the child's soul.
That whole "original sin" issue aside, I just can't even begin to imagine any "God" not allowing an infant into whatever heaven might exist simply because they had not been baptised. That's just asinine.
Isn't it?
I think that it raises a very interesting issue, which is that, while the
Bible itself portrays a sadistic, tyrannical and jealous god, the Christian churches of the 21st century generally try to get around this by portraying God in a better light. They do not, for instance, mention the times in the
Old Testament where God is reported as ordering his servants/followers to murder survivors of a battle or rape any female (virgin, of course) prisoners that they want.
Various famous stories have been bastardised in order to change their meaning. For instance, in the Sodom & Gomorrah story, you don't hear much these days about how Lot was perfectly prepared to offer his virgin daughters to the men outside his home who, allegedly, wanted sex with the two strangers that he had welcomed into his home. So pimping and raping girls is fine, in
Biblical terms, but adult homosexual sex is not. That is not, however, the way in which the story is still told – while 'Sodom & Gomorrah' has become a byword for debauchery and sodom gave its name to sodomy. Yet Lot is still described as the 'one good man' from the towns who was worth saving – it was his wife, swimply for looking back, who was punished, not Lot for offering his children to be raped. You don't hear much these days about how, after the departure from Sodom, his daughters got him drunk and then had sex with him (so not too drunk) and bore children by their father. No punishment is mentioned for this behaviour, so presumably incest is acceptable in
Biblical terms too.
The story of Onan has given it's name to onanism – mastutbation – and is told in such a way that it makes out masturbation to be a deadly sin. Yet the story actually has Er (Onan's brother) upsetting God by, er, erring, and being killed by God as a result. After that, God tells Onan to go and have sex (rape, in effect – there's never anything about female consent in the
Bible) with Er's widow. He refuses and 'spills his seed on the ground' instead. So, he refuses to rape his widowed sister-in-law – and he's the bad bloke for that?
Job – that paragon of fortitude, faith and patience. Look what happened to him. He's a faithful follower of God, who is made to suffer (but not as much as his family and his servants etc, who are killed) just so that God can prove a point to the Devil. In other words, so that God can win a bet with the Devil.
Look at how Abraham is perfectly prepared to murder his young son because God told him to. I was taught this story as an example of faith – it might well be faith, but it's also about child abuse. Even if the murder didn't go ahead, what a sadistic way to test someone's faith. And what a sadistic thing to do to a child, to take them and place them on an altar and prepare to murder them.
The Christian churches know that huge swathes of the
Bible are not applicable in a more civilised world, and they avoid these things like the proverbial plague. But they cannot admit this, because to do so would be to acknowledge that the
Bible cannot simply be taken as gospel (so to speak). And that automatically says that either it was not divinely inspired or that, if it was, God didn't know what He was doing/saying and that we now know better.