Catholicism According to the
Canon law of the Catholic Church, before the age of seven, a child "is considered not responsible for oneself", but after that "is presumed to have the use of reason." In the
Catholic Church, an individual is required to make an
act of faith when they come to the age of accountability.
Reformed Reformed theologians tend to reject the concept altogether.
Ligon Duncan argues that although there is an "age of discretion", the age of accountability is
conception – that is, "there is no time in a human being's life when he or she is not accountable to God." Duncan suggests that The idea of an age of accountability arose in the 19th century and the 20th century amongst non-Calvinistic Protestants who were attempting to address the issue of
infant mortality and explain on the basis of
Arminianism and
freewill why all children who had been unable to exercise their own unaided faith by freewill didn't go to hell.
Methodism Methodist doctrine teaches that the
atonement of Christ "is unconditionally effective in the salvation of those mentally incompetent from birth, of those converted persons who have become mentally incompetent, and of children under the age of accountability."
Wesleyan-Arminian theology teaches that those who die before reaching the age of accountability will go to
heaven. ==Implications==