Biblical text is most relevant within a theocracy or
a secular government which has laws that are
consistent with biblical text. The United States does
not, of course, fall within either category. This
section is included only to counter the false claim
that there is no New Testament support for capital
punishment.
1) Virtually all religious scholars agree that the
correctly translated commandment "Thou shalt not
murder" is a prohibition against individual cases of
murder. There is no biblical prohibition against the
government imposition of the death penalty in
deserving cases. Indeed, the government imposition of
capital punishment is required for deliberate murder.
(Dr. Charles Ryrie, Biblical Answers to Contemporary
Issues & The Ryrie Study Bible, Exodus 20:13).
2) " . . . pronouncements about divine behavior (in
the Hebrew Bible) correlated in the judicial context
to attitudes toward death as a proper punishment.
Quite clearly, the New Testament carries on the
earlier mentality." As Jesus described in the Sermon
on the Mount, "Obedience will be rewarded with life;
disobedience will be punished with destruction. A God
who rewards with life and punishes with death is One
whose laws provide for death as a judicial
punishment." Dr. Baruch Levine, "Capital Punishment,"
p 31, What the Bible Really Says, ed. Smith &
Hoffman, 1993.
3) "If no crime deserves the death penalty, then it
is hard to see why it was fitting that Christ be put
to death for our sins and crucified among thieves.
St. Thomas Aquinas quotes a gloss of St. Jerome on
Matthew 27: ‘As Christ became accursed of the cross
for us, for our salvation He was crucified as a
guilty one among the guilty.’ That Christ be put to
death as a guilty person, presupposes that death is a
fitting punishment for those who are guilty." Prof.
Michael Pakaluk, The Death Penalty: An Opposing
Viewpoints Series Book, Greenhaven Press, (hereafter
TDP:OVS), 1991
4) "The same divine law which forbids the killing of
a human being allows certain exceptions. Since the
agent of authority is but a sword in the hand, and is
not responsible for the killing, it is in no way
contrary to the commandment ‘Thou shalt not kill’,
for the representative of the State’s authority to
put criminals to death, according to the Law or the
rule of rational justice." St. Augustine, The City of
God, Book 1, Chapter 21. See F.16
5) "The rejection of capital punishment is not to be
dignified as a ‘higher Christian way’ that enthrones
the ethics of Jesus. The argument that Jesus as the
incarnation of divine love cancels the
appropriateness of capital punishment in the New
Testament era has little to commend it. Nowhere does
the Bible repudiate capital punishment for
premeditated murder; not only is the death penalty
for deliberate killing of a fellow human being
permitted, but it is approved and encouraged, and for
any government that attaches at least as much value
to the life of an innocent victim as to a deliberate
murderer, it is ethically imperative." Dr. Carl F. H.
Henry, Twilight Of A Great Civilization, Crossway,
1988, p 70,72. Father Pierre Lachance, O.P. (St, Anne
Parish, Fall River, Mass.) fully concurs: "There is
no question but that capital punishment was not only
allowed but mandated in the Old Testament. In the New
Law (New Testament) (St.) Paul recognizes the
legitimacy of capital punishment . . .’It is not
without purpose that the ruler carries the sword. He
is God’s servant, to inflict his avenging wrath upon
the wrongdoer Romans 13:4.’ " (TDP:OVS, 1986, pg. 84)
6) "It is because humans are created in the image of
God that capital punishment for premeditated murder
was a perpetual obligation. The full range of
biblical data weighs in its favor. This is the one
crime in the Bible for which no restitution was
possible (Numbers 35:31,33). The Noahic covenant
recorded in Genesis 9 ("Whoever sheds the blood of
man, by man shall his blood be shed. "Gen 9:6)
antedates Israel and the Mosaic code; it transcends
Old Testament Law, per se, and mirrors ethical
legislation that is binding for all cultures and
eras. The sanctity of human life is rooted in the
universal creation ethic and thus retains its force
in society. The Christian community is called upon to
articulate standards of biblical justice, even when
this may be unpopular. Capital justice is part of
that non-negotiable standard. Society should execute
capital offenders to balance the scales of moral
judgement." From "Capital Punishment: A Personal
Statement", by Charles W. Colson., a former opponent.
He is spiritual advisor and friend to numerous death
row inmates and the Founder of Prison Fellowship, the
largest Christian ministry serving incarcerated
prisoners. Ph.703-478-0100.
7) St. Thomas Aquinas finds all biblical
interpretations against executions "frivolous",
citing Exodus 22:18, "wrongdoers thou shalt not
suffer to live". Unequivocally, he states," The civil
rulers execute, justly and sinlessly, pestiferous men
in order to protect the peace of the state." (Summa
Contra Gentiles, III, 146.)
8) "God, Himself, instituted the death penalty
(Genesis 9:6) and Christ regarded capital punishment
as a just penalty for murder (Matthew 26:52). God
gave to government the legitimate authority to use
capital punishment to restrain murder and to punish
murderers. Not to inflict the death penalty is a
flagrant disregard for God’s divine Law which
recognizes the dignity of human life as a product of
God’s creation. Life is sacred, and that is why God
instituted the death penalty. Consequently, whoever
takes innocent human life forfeits his own right to
live." Protestant scholar Rev. Reuben Hahn (Mt.
Prospect, Ill.), Human Events, 3/2/85.
9) "The fact that the evil, as long as they live, can
be corrected from their errors does not prohibit the
fact that they may be justly executed, for the danger
which threatens from their way of life is greater and
more certain than the good which may be expected from
their improvement. They also have at that critical
point of death the opportunity to be converted to God
through repentance. And if they are so stubborn that
even at the point of death their heart does not draw
back from evil, it is possible to make a highly
probable judgement that they would never come away
from evil to the right use of their powers." St.
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Contra Gentiles, Book III, 146.
10) The movie Dead Man Walking reveals a perfect
example of how just punishment and redemption can
work together. Had rapist/murderer Matthew Poncelet
not been properly sentenced to death by the civil
authority, he would not have met Sister Prejean, he
would not have received spiritual instruction, he
would not have taken responsibility for his crimes
and he would not have reconciled with God. Had
Poncelet never been caught or had he only been given
a prison sentence, his character makes it VERY clear
that those elements would not have come together.
Indeed, for the entire film and up until those last
moments, prior to his execution, Poncelet was not
fully truthful with Sister Prejean. His lying and
manipulative nature was fully exposed at that crucial
time. It was not at all surprising, then, that it was
just prior to his execution that all of the spiritual
elements may have come together for his salvation. It
was now, or never. Truly, just as St. Aquinas
predicted (F.9.), it was his pending execution which
finally led to his repentance. For Christians, the
most crucial concerns of Dead Man Walking must be and
are redemption and eternal salvation. And, for that
reason, it may well be, for Christians, the most
important pro-death penalty movie ever made.
A real life example of this may be the case of Dennis
Gentry, executed April 16, 1997, for the highly
premeditated murder of his friend Jimmy Don Ham.
During his final statement, Gentry said, "I’d like to
thank the Lord for the past 14 years (on death row)
to grow as a man and mature enough to accept what’s
happening here tonight. To my family, I’m happy. I’m
going home to Jesus." As the lethal drugs began to
flow, Gentry cried out, "Sweet Jesus, here I come.
Take me home. I’m going that way to see the Lord."
(Michael Gracyk, Associated Press, Houston Chronicle,
4/17/97). We cannot know if Gentry or the fictitious
Poncelet or the two real murderers from the DMW book
really did repent and receive salvation. But, we do
know that St. Aquinas advises us that murderers
should not be given the benefit of the doubt. We
should err on the side of caution and not give
murderers the opportunity to harm again. Indeed, as
Dr. W.H. Baker confirms in his On Capital Punishment
(Moody Press, 1985), biblical text finds that it is a
violation of God’s mandate not to execute
premeditated murderers - and nowhere does the text
contradict this finding.
11) In his 1995 encyclical, The Gospel of Life
(Evangelium Vitae), Pope John Paul II finds that the
only time executions can be justified is when they
are required "to defend society" and that "as a
result of steady improvements . . . in the penal
system that such cases are very rare if not
practically non existent." The Pope is in error. Such
cases are not at all rare. In this context, "to
defend society" means that the execution of the
murderer must save future lives. Murderers murder
again, often time and time again - in prison, after
escape, after release, and, of course, after we fail
to capture or incarcerate them. In fact, had the Pope
correctly evaluated the penal system, using the
"defending society" standard, he would require an
increase in executions. We know that some criminals
don’t commit murder because of their fear of
execution. The incapacitation effect, the individual
deterrent effect and the general deterrent effect
support that the death penalty does indeed "defend
society". Executions save lives. Therefore, expanding
the use of executions is required by a "defending
society" standard. However, even though Romans 13:4
and additional writings reveal a "defending society"
consideration, such references pale in comparison to
the mandate that execution is the required punishment
for and atonement for murder, regardless of any
consideration "to defend society." And the writings
of Saint Thomas Aquinas and Saint Augustine concur.
Therefore, atonement, proper punishment and
"defending society" each require an increase in
executions. Furthermore, one of the most respected of
all popes, Saint Pius V, reaffirmed, in the Catechism
of the Council of Trent (1566), that executions were
acts of "paramount obedience to the (fifth/sixth)
commandment." What biblical and theological
teachings, developed from 1566 through 1997, provide
that the standard for executions should evolve from
"paramount obedience" to God’s eternal law to a civil
standard reflecting "steady improvements . . . in the
penal system?"
Furthermore, if the "defending society" standard is
accepted, then the moral concept of justice becomes
irrelevant. Capital punishment can be used only as a
vehicle to preventing future crimes. The
moral/biblical rational - that capital punishment is
the just punishment for capital murder - is no longer
relevant to the sin/crime of murder. The biblical
standards of atonement, expiation, and justice have,
necessarily, been thrown away, if "defending society"
is the standard. Capital punishment no longer has any
connection to the harm done or to the imbalance to be
addressed. In fact, the injury suffered by the crime
of murder isn’t even relevant. Punishment is to be
justified solely upon the ability of that punishment
to prevent future murders. Therefore, when
considering executions in regard to capital murder
cases, a "defending society" standard renders justice
irrelevant. With minor revisions, the Evangelium
Vitae was the basis for a 1997 amendment to the
Universal Catechism of 1992.
12) Christians who speak out against capital
punishment in deserving cases " . . . tend to
subordinate the justice of God to the love of God. .
. . Peter, by cutting off Malchu’s ear,. . . was most
likely trying to kill the soldier (John 18:10)",
prompting " . . . Christ’s statement that those who
kill by the sword are subject to die by the sword
(Matthew 26:51-52)." This " implicitly recognizes the
government’s right to exercise the death penalty."
Dr. Carl F.H.Henry, "A Matter of Life and Death", p
52 Christianity Today, 8/4/95.
13) "When it is a question of the execution of a man
condemned to death it is then reserved to the public
power to deprive the condemned of the benefit of
life, in expiation of his fault, when already, by his
fault, he has dispossessed himself of the right to
live." Pope Pius XII, 9/14/52.
14) Some speculate that God’s mandate for capital
punishment is weak, because the requirement for two
witnesses in such cases (Numbers 35:30; Deuteronomy
17:6) drastically reduces the application of that
sanction. Such speculation is unwarranted. By wrongly
isolating the Hebrew ‘ d, "witness", from its broad
biblical context, some interpreters have falsely
concluded that two or more "eye"witnesses are
required in capital cases and in all criminal cases
subject to court judgement (Deuteronomy 19:5). Did
God want nearly all criminals, including murderers,
to get off, scot-free, if " . . . (they) had not
taken the prudent measure of committing (their) crime
where two people did not happen to be watching him?"
The biblical record rejects any such conclusion.
The word "witness", ‘ d, has broad meaning,
including, anyone with (1) " . . . pertinent
knowledge concerning the crime, even though he had
not actually seen it."(Lev 5:1), such as motive,
opportunity, accomplices, overheard confessions,
wiretaps, etc.; (2) physical evidence can also bear
witness, also ‘ d (Ex 22:13), such as bloody
clothing, murder weapon, DNA, fingerprints, etc.; (3)
written documents may serve as evidence and witness
(‘ d or ‘ dah, Jos 25:25-27), such as a confession,
documents showing motive or implication, etc.; (4)
monuments and memorial stones, such as gal-‘ d in Gen
31:46-49, can also bear witness. Indeed, "there is no
contravention of biblical principles in allowing such
testimony, even though only one actual witness may be
found, or none at all." There is no biblical
requirement for two, or any, "eye" witnesses in
criminal cases.(Dr. Gleason L. Archer, Encyclopedia
of Biblical Difficulties, Zondervan Pub., 143-145,
1982, also see the exceptional writings on John 8:11,
371-373, therein.) According to actual biblical
usage, the witness and evidence requirements in
capital cases in the U.S. meet or exceed all biblical
standards.
15) Paul, in his hearing before Festus, states:"if
then I am a wrong doer, and have committed anything
worthy of death, I do not refuse to die."Acts 25:11.
"Very clearly this constitutes an acknowledgment on
the part of the inspired apostle that the state
continued to have the power of life and death in the
administration of justice, just as it did from the
days of Noah (Gen 9:6)". Ibid., F.14., p. 342.
16) (A) "If you do what is evil, be afraid; for [ the
civil government ] does not bear the sword for
nothing; for it is the minister of God, an avenger
who brings wrath upon those who practice evil."
Romans 13:4. "God has given the state the power of
life and death over its subjects in order to maintain
order." Dr. Charles Ryrie, The Ryrie Study Bible
(NAS), 1978. (B) Romans 13:4 does not " . . .
directly refer to the infliction of the death
penalty; but in the context of first century Rome and
against the Old Testament background (Genesis 9:4-6),
Paul would clearly include the death penalty in the
state’s panalopy of punishments for wrongdoing."
Douglas Moo, The Epistle To the Romans, Erdmans,
1996, pg. 802, footnote 54. (C) "Since the word sword
(machaira) has occurred earlier in the letter to
indicate death (Romans 8:35) and since it was used of
execution (Acts 12:2; Revelation 13:10), it seems
clear that Paul means it here as a symbol of capital
punishment." Stott, John, ROMANS, InterVarsity Press,
342, 1994. (D) Specifically, "this word for sword
indicates one that was shaped like a sabre and was
carried by magistrates to show that they had the
power to punish, even to death." Ryrie Study Bible -
Expanded Edition, NAS, Moody Press, 1995, pg. 1810,
Romans 13:4, footnote 13:4. (E) "(Jesus) warned Peter
that to ‘die by the sword’ is the punishment proper
for those who take human life (Matthew 25:26); it
should be noted that the sword was meant for
execution, not for life imprisonment." Henry, ibid F.
5, p 71. Also review F. 4, 5 and 25.
17) It is not uncommon for persons of faith to create
a god in their own image, to give to that god their
values, instead of accepting those values which are
inherent to the deity. For example, celebrated
opponent Sister Helen Prejean (Dead Man Walking)
states, in reference to the death penalty, that "I
couldn’t worship a god who is less compassionate than
I am."(Progressive, 1/96; bold "I", JFA). She has,
thereby, established her standard of compassion as
the basis for God’s being deserving of her devotion.
If God’s level of compassion does not rise to the
level of her own, God couldn’t receive her worship.
Director Tim Robbins (Death Man Walking) follows that
same path: "(I) don’t believe in that kind of (g)od
(that would support capital punishment and,
therefore, would be the kind of god who tortures
people into their redemption)." ("Opposing The Death
Penalty", AMERICA, 11/9/96, p 12). Robbins, hereby,
establishes his standard for his God’s deserving of
his belief. God’s standards do not seem to be
relevant. His sophomoric comparison of capital
punishment and torture is typical of the ignorance in
this debate and such comments reflect no biblical
relevancy. Perhaps they should review Matthew 5:17-22
and 15:1-9. Be cautious, for as the ancient rabbis
warned, "Do not seek to be more righteous than your
creator." (Ecclesiastes Rabbah 7.33)
18) One of the most respected of all Quaker biblical
scholars is Dr. Gervas A. Carey. A Professor of Bible
and past President of George Fox College, Dr. Carey
wrote a landmark essay on the death penalty entitled
"A Bible Study". Here is a synopsis of his analysis:
" . . . the decree of Genesis 9:5-6 is equally
enduring and cannot be separated from the other
pledges and instructions of its immediate context,
Genesis 8:20-9:17; . . . that is true unless specific
Biblical authority can be cited for the deletion, of
which there appears to be none. It seems strange that
any opponents of capital punishment who professes to
recognize the authority of the Bible either overlook
or disregard the divine decree in this covenant with
Noah; . . . capital punishment should be recognized .
. . as the divinely instituted penalty for murder;
The basis of this decree . . . is as enduring as God;
. . . murder not only deprives a man of a portion of
his earthly life . . . it is a further sin against
him as a creature made in the image of God and
against God Himself whose image the murderer does not
respect." (p. 111-113) Carey agrees with Saints
Augustine and Aquinas, that executions represent
mercy to the wrongdoer: ". . . a secondary measure of
the love of God may be said to appear. For capital
punishment provides the murderer with incentive to
repentance which the ordinary man does not have, that
is a definite date on which he is to meet his God. It
is as if God thus providentially granted him a
special inducement to repentance out of consideration
of the enormity of his crime . . . the law grants to
the condemned an opportunity which he did not grant
to his victim, the opportunity to prepare to meet his
God. Even divine justice here may be said to be
tempered with mercy." (p. 116). Essays on the Death
Penalty, T. Robert Ingram, ed., St. Thomas Press,
Houston, 1963, 1992.
19) "The just use of (executions), far from involving
the crime of murder, is an act of paramount obedience
to this (Fifth) Commandment which prohibits murder."
Pope (and Saint) Pius V, "The Roman Catechism of the
Council of Trent" (1566). Referring to that
Catechism, Catholic scholar Father James Reilly, M.S.
notes that "From the time of St. Paul until today
this has always been the official teaching of the
Catholic Church and only the Holy See or a General
Counsel has the authority to change it. The curious
thing is that those Catholics who have repeatedly
condemned capital punishment and have, often,
apparently at least, declared it immoral, never refer
to that passage from the Roman Catechism. It may be
that they are unaware of it, but such ignorance is,
in my opinion, inexcusable." (Haven Bradford Gow,
"Religious Views Support The Death Penalty", The
Death Penalty: Opposing Viewpoints, Greenhaven Press,
1986, p. 82 ).
20) "You have heard the ancients were told, ‘YOU
SHALL NOT COMMIT MURDER’ and ‘Whoever commits murder
shall be liable to the court’. But I say to you that
everyone who is angry with his brother shall be
guilty before the court; and whoever shall say to his
brother, ‘Raca’, shall be guilty before the supreme
court and whoever shall say, ‘You fool’, shall be
guilty enough to go into fiery hell." Jesus, Matthew
5:17-22. Should any explanation be necessary, Jesus
is saying that even as execution is the required
punishment for murderers, as per the Old Testament,
He tells us that those who speak ill of others and
have hatred in their heart shall suffer in hell. Not
only does Jesus never speak out against the civil
authorities just use of execution for murder, He
prescribes a much more serious, eternal punishment
for those who hate and speak ill of others. And what
price does God exact for any and all sin? Death.
(Romans 5:12-14)
21) "It is abundantly clear that the Bible depicts
murder as a capital crime for which death is
considered the appropriate punishment, and one is
hard pressed to find a biblical ‘proof text’ in
either the Hebrew Testament or the New Testament
which unequivocally refutes this. Even Jesus’
admonition ‘Let him without sin cast the first
stone,’ when He was asked the appropriate punishment
for an adulteress (John 8:7) - the Mosaic Law
prescribed death - should be read in its proper
context. This passage is an ‘entrapment’ story, which
sought to show Jesus’ wisdom in besting His
adversaries. It is not an ethical pronouncement about
capital punishment .”Sister Helen Prejean, Dead Man
Walking. The sister’s analysis is consistent with
virtually all theological scholarship. From here, the
sister states that “ . . . more and more I find
myself steering away from such futile discussions (of
Biblical text). Instead, I try to articulate what I
personally believe . . . ” As the long term
Chairperson of the National Coalition to Abolish the
Death Penalty, the sister has never shied away from
any argument, futile or otherwise, which opposed the
death penalty. She has abandoned biblical text for
only one reason: the text conflicts with her personal
beliefs.
It is common for persons to take biblical text out of
context and to, thereby, pervert its meaning. Indeed,
Sister Prejean rightly cautions: "Many people sift
through the Scriptures and select truth according to
their own templates." (Progressive, 1/96). Sadly,
Sister Prejean appears to do much worse. The sister
now uses that very same biblical text “Let the one
who is without sin cast the first stone” as proof of
Jesus’ “unequivocal” rejection of capital punishment
as “revenge and unholy retribution”! This appears to
be a disgraceful and intentional perversion of
biblical text. (see Sister Prejean’s 12/12/96
fundraising letter on behalf of the Saga Of Shame
book project for Quixote Center/Equal Justice USA).
22) Pontius Pilate said to Jesus, "You do not speak
to me? Do You not know that I have authority to
release You, and I have authority to crucify You?"
Jesus answered, "You would have no authority over Me,
unless it had been given you from above."(John
19:10-11). "Jesus reminds Pilate that the
implementation of the death penalty is a divinely
entrusted responsibility that is to be justly
implemented.” Prof. Carl F.H. Henry, 45th Annual
N.A.E. Convention, "Capital Punishment and The
Bible". Jesus confirms that the civil authority has
the lawful right to execute Jesus, and others, and
that this right has been given to that authority by
God.
23) Some churches are now espousing a pro-life
continuum, a philosophy whereby the taking of any
life, under any circumstances, must be condemned -
such as the taking of lives through war, self
defense, suicide, abortion and the death penalty.
This is an interesting social philosophy which
directly conflicts with the Word of God. Catholic
biblical scholar Father Richard Roach, S.J. of
Marquette and Columbia Universities argues that it is
not a contradiction for religious people to oppose
abortion and . . . to support capital punishment.
"Abortion is absolutely prohibited. It is always
evil. No one can ever abort a ‘guilty’ baby, so the
act can never be right. This is not the case,
however, with either capital punishment or a just and
defensive war. It is only murder, along with its
subdivisions suicide and abortion, which God’s law
absolutely prohibits. The upshot of all this is that
trying to put abortion, capital punishment and war in
one package makes chaos of Catholic morals and can
lead one to misinterpret God’s Law . . . " Princeton.
University scholar Dr. Paul Ramsey fully concurs:
"abortion and capital punishment are two different
questions. There is no inconsistancy between moral
disapproval of unnecessarily killing the innocent and
the judicial execution of the guilty." (Haven
Bradford Gow, "Religious Views Support The Death
Penalty", The Death Penalty: Opposing Viewpoints,
Greenhaven Press, 1986, p. 81- 82 & 84).
24) "If a man is a danger to the community,
threatening it with disintegration by some wrongdoing
of his, then his execution for the healing and
preservation of the common good is to be commended.
Only the public authority, not private persons, may
licitly execute malefactors by public judgement. Men
shall be sentenced to death for crimes of irreparable
harm or which are particularly perverted." St. Thomas
Aquinas, Summa Theologica, 11; 65-2; 66-6.
25) “If by arming the magistrate, the Lord has also
committed him the use of the sword, then, whenever he
punishes the guilty by death, he is obeying God’s
commands by exercising His vengeance. Those,
therefore, who consider it is wrong to shed the blood
of the guilty are contending against God.” John
Calvin, “The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the
Romans and to the Thessalonians”, in Calvin’s
Commentaries, trans. Ross McKenzie(Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1960) p.283. see D.16
26) "The opposition to capital punishment is not
based on Scripture but on a vague philosophical idea
that the taking of a life is wrong, under every
circumstance, and fails to distinguish adequately
between killing and murder, between punishment and
crime. The argument that capital punishment rules out
the possibility of repentance for crime is
unrealistic. If a wanton killer does not repent when
the sentence of death is upon him, he certainly will
not repent if he has 20-50 years of life
imprisonment. The sentence of death on a killer is
more redemptive than the tendency to excuse his crime
as no worse than grand larceny. Mercy always infers a
tacit recognition that justice and rightness are to
be expected. The Holy God does not show mercy
contrary to his righteousness but in harmony with it.
That is why the awful Cross was necessary and a
righteous Christ had to hang on it. That is why God’s
redemption is always conditioned by one’s heart
attitude. The Church and individual Christians should
be active in their witness to the Gospel of love and
forgiveness; but meanwhile wherever and whenever
God’s love and mercy are rejected, as in crime,
natural law and order must prevail, not as extraneous
to redemption but as part of the whole scope of God’s
dealings with man. No matter how often a jury
recommends mercy, the law of capital punishment must
stand as the silent but powerful witness to the
sacredness of God-given life. Active justice must be
administered when the sacredness of life is violated.
Life is sacred, and he who violates the sacredness of
life through murder must pay the supreme penalty. It
is significant that when Jesus voluntarily went the
way of the Cross He chose the capital punishment of
His day as His instrument to save the world. And when
He gave redemption to the repentant thief He did not
save Him from capital punishment but gave him
paradise instead. We see again that mercy and
forgiveness are something different from being
excused from wrongdoing. Synopsis of Dr. Jacob J.
Vellenga’s "Is Capital Punishment Wrong", p. 63-72,
Essays on the Death Penalty, ed. T. Robert Ingram,
Houston, 1963, 1992. Dr. Vallenga is former Associate
Executive of the United Presbyterian Church (USA).
27) The leadership councils of some Christian
denominations in the U.S. have released statements in
opposition to the death penalty. These statements
reflect social positions that have questionable
biblical foundation and, often, they reflect
positions which selectively only discuss the mercy of
God and improperly avoid the justice of God. For
example, some believe that it would be hypocritical
for Christians to support capital punishment, because
that would suggest that some peoples’ sins are not
forgivable. They argue that capital punishment
conflicts with Jesus’ teachings - that, if we are not
willing to forgive, then we place ourselves outside
of God’s forgiveness. Such pronouncements are hardly
convincing and are biblically inaccurate. All death
row inmates, no matter how vile and numerous their
misdeeds, are subject to the forgiveness of men and
of God and, more importantly, they are subject to
redemption and eternal salvation. Indeed, God compels
us, individually, to forgive those who have harmed
us. This, in no way, conflicts with thebiblical
mandate that the government authority impose the
death penalty in deserving cases. Social positions
cannot and do not replace biblical instruction.
Furthermore, the murder victim is hardly capable of
forgiving the murderer. The biblical requirement to
forgive those who injure us is an individual
requirement. Therefore, no one, other than God, has
the moral authority to forgive the crime of murder.
28) "While the thief on the cross found pardon in the
sight of God - ‘Today you will be with Me in
Paradise’ - that pardon did not extend to eliminating
the consequences of his crime - ‘We are being justly
punished, for we are receiving what we deserve for
our deeds.’ (Luke 23:39-43)". Neither God nor Jesus
nor the Holy Spirit nor the prophets nor the apostles
ever spoke out against the civil authorities use of
executions in deserving cases - not even at the very
time of Jesus’ own execution when He pardoned the
sins of the thief, who was being crucified along side
Him. Indeed, quite the opposite. Their biblical
support for capital punishment is consistent and
overwhelming. Furthermore, Jesus never confuses the
requirements of civil justice with those of either
eternal justice or personal relations. Charles Colson
accurately recognizes this fact in stating that" it
leads to a perversion of legal justice to confuse the
sphere of private relations with that of civil law."
All quotations from Charles Colson’s "Capital
Punishment: A Personal Statement". See D.6.
Continuing this thread, Protestant scholar and
journalist Rev. G. Aiken Taylor states, ”Most
Christians tend to confuse the Christian personal
ethic with the requirements of social order. In other
words, we tend to apply what the Bible teaches us
about how we - personally - should behave toward our
neighbors with what the Bible teaches about how to
preserve order in society. And there is a big
difference. Capital punishment is specifically
enjoined in the Bible. ’Who ever sheddeth man’s
blood, by man shall his blood be shed’(Genesis 9-6).
This command is fully agreeable to the Sixth
Commandment, ‘Thou shalt not kill,’ (Exodus 20:13),
because the two appear in the same context. Exactly
25 verses after saying ‘Thou shalt not kill’, the Law
says, ‘He that smiteth a man so that he may die,
shall be surely put to death’ (Ex 21:12)." See also
Leviticus 24:17 and Numbers 35:30-31.(TDP:OVS, pg.
84,1986) Biblical teachings regarding personal
conduct, civil government and eternal judgement and
relations are often taken out of context, thereby
replacing one duty or instruction improperly with
another.
29) In addition to the required punishment for murder
and the deterrence standards, both Saint Augustine
and Saint Thomas Aquinas find that executing
murderers is also an act of charity and mercy. Saint
Augustine confirms that " . . . inflicting capital
punishment . . . protects those who are undergoing
capital punishment from the harm they may suffer . .
. through increased sinning which might continue if
their life went on." (On the Lord’s Sermon,
1.20.63-64.) Saint Thomas Aquinas finds that " . . .
the death inflicted by the judge profits the sinner,
if he be converted, unto the expiation of his crime;
and, if he be not converted, it profits so as to put
an end to the sin, because the sinner is thus
deprived of the power to sin anymore." (Summa
Theologica, II-II, 25, 6 ad 2.)
30) God, through the power and justice of the Holy
Spirit, executed both Ananias and his wife, Saphira.
Their crime? Lying to the Holy Spirit - to God -
through Peter. Acts 5:1-11. By executing two such
devoted Christians for lying to Him, does the Holy
Spirit show confirmation of His support for His
divinely instituted civil punishment of execution for
premeditated murder or does it show His rejection of
capital punishment? And read all of Revelation.
31) There are two passages in Luke which speak
directly to Jesus’ position on capital punishment. In
20:14-16, Jesus states: “He will come and kill those
tenants and give the vineyard to others”. Jesus is
stating that the proper punishment for murder is
death. In 19:27, “Christ pronounced this judgement on
those who rebelled against their king: ‘But these
enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over
them, bring them here, and slay them in my
presence’(NASB). Thus, it is very clear that neither
Christ nor His apostles intended to abrogate the
God-given responsibility of the government (under Old
Testament law) to protect its citizens and enforce
justice by capital punishment.” ibid, D.14., pg. 342.
In the 19:27 parable “their king” is Jesus.
32) The Bible clearly asserts, from beginning to end,
without any reservation, that righteous judgement
includes the execution of a murderer. In the case of
murder, the biblical materials offer the clearest and
most sustained justification for the death penalty.
The purpose of capital punishment is justice -
deterrence is irrelevant. A person who takes a human
life, without proper sanction, forfeits any right to
life - no alternative is allowed and the community
must not be swayed by values to the contrary.
Listen carefully to the Bible as the Word of God
rather than seek to improve upon it by means of human
values. However meritorious mercy may be, however
abundantly evident it may be in God’s own dealings,
murder was an offense for which mercy and pity were
not allowed and for which monetary compensation was
strictly forbidden. The sentence is set by God’s
torah and a judge cannot have discretion in this
matter. Murder is something utterly on its own,
nothing can be compared to it.
It should not be overlooked, in seeking to discover
“the mind of Jesus Christ” on the issue of murder and
its punishments, that He goes beyond torah to the
statement that even verbal abuse makes one deserving
of “the hell of fire”. Far from releasing believers
from prior law, Jesus was a “hard liner” who made
things even tougher, stating that He has come not “to
abolish the law and the prophets . . . but to fulfill
them.”, offering even stronger interpretations than
in the original (Matthew 5:17-22). Indeed, Jesus
admonishes the Pharisees not to misuse torah for
their own ends, but to honor God and torah. And of
all the text in the Bible, which one does Jesus
select to emphasize that crucial point? “HE WHO
SPEAKS EVIL OF FATHER OR MOTHER, LET HIM BE PUT TO
DEATH”(Matthew 15:1-9).
All interpretations, contrary to the biblical support
of capital punishment, are false. Interpreters ought
to listen to the Bible’s own agenda, rather than to
squeeze from it implications for their own agenda. As
the ancient rabbis taught, “Do not seek to be more
righteous than your Creator.” (Ecclesiastes Rabbah
7.33.). Synopsis of Professor Lloyd R. Bailey’s book
Capital Punishment: What the Bible Says, Abingdon
Press, 1987. This is the definitive work on this
subject. It is mandatory reading for those who wish
to undertake a thorough and accurate look at this
often misused and misunderstood area of concern and
debate.
Conclusion: Throughout the Hebrew Testament and the
New Testament, there is overwhelming biblical support
for the divinely instituted punishment of death in
cases of murder, such punishment to be carried out by
the governing authority. There appears to be no
biblical text which withdraws or condemns the
punishment or that authority. Indeed, all evidence is
quite to the contrary.
Opponents and advocates of capital punishment often
make fundamental errors in citing biblical text.
Those errors are usually found within the following
categories:
(1) Confusing the obligations of individuals with
those of the government. Example: Matthew 5:38-39:
"You have heard that it was said, ‘an eye for an eye,
and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, do not
resist who is evil; but whoever slaps you on your
right cheek, turn to him the other also." Strangely,
opponents cite this as proof of Jesus’ abandonment of
capital punishment. If one were to assume that this
text referenced the actions of the governing
authority and not individual obligations, then one
would clearly find that government could not enforce
any law which sought to protect the lives and
property of its law abiding citizens. There is no
reference to capital punishment in the text.
Therefore, all wrongdoers, be that robbers, rapists
or murderers could act repeatedly, with impunity, if
the text was an obligation on the governing
authority. This text is directed at individuals and
has no application to the governing authority or its
right and duty to execute. ( Carey, ibid F.18, pg.
122)
(2) Isolating specific biblical text from the broader
context of the discussion. Example: Ezekiel 33:11:
"As I live, says the Lord God, I have no pleasure in
the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn
from his way and live; turn back, turn back your evil
ways; for why will you die, O house of Israel?" Let’s
review Dr. Bailey’s analysis: "To some readers, that
may be seem clear enough! God not only takes no
"pleasure" in the death (execution?) of the wicked
(criminal?), but prefers that they "turn back" (be
rehabilitated?). Such understanding might indeed be
justified if one could read the Bible atomistically,
that is, one verse at a time, with the understanding
that the verse has a self contained eternal truth.
However, if the prophet is speaking to a specific
audience about a particular problem, and if his
response covers several verses (or even a chapter),
then the modern interpreter must hear him out and
look for the central idea. That is, what a verse says
may not be what the context (and thus the prophet)
means. . . .the words are addressed to the ‘house of
Israel’ (specifically the Judean exiles of
Babylonia), in response to their lament. (And) Who
are the wicked? The exiles whose betrayal of the
covenant has led to exile. What is meant by their
"death"? Both their political situation ("we waste
away") and their dwindling faith in the ancient
concept of election. God takes no "pleasure" in the
death of the wicked (i.e., does not see it as
necessary that the exiles have this attitude and
forever remain in Babylonia). The Deity desires
repentance, change of priorities, renewal of ancient
values, life as it was intended by this community
{"turn back"} . . . and return to the promised land.
Thus, the text is not concerned with the fate of
anyone who has been sentenced to death by the
judiciary (or even per se with individuals who face
death), and it does not therefore suggest what the
religious persons response should be in that case."
Bailey, ibid F.31,pg. 42-43. "It is a faulty exegesis
to take a verse of Scripture out of context and
interpret it without regard to its qualifying
words."See Vallenga, ibid F.26, pg. 65.
(3) Believing that Christ abandoned the Law of the
Hebrew Testament and instituted a new ethic in the
New Testament, based solely on mercy. There are 20
chapters, within the 28 chapters of Matthew, which
discuss destruction, hell, unquenchable fire, and/or
differing forms of punishment and exclusion by God
(see Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:22, 29-30; 8:12;
11:23-24; 12:30-32; 13:41-42, 49-50; 18:8-9; 22:2-14;
23:33, 25:40-46) and/or honor the Law of the Hebrew
Testament (see specific references Matthew 5 and 15).
"For this you know with certainty, that no immoral or
impure person has an inheritance in the kingdom of
Christ and God." Ephesians 5:5. "When the Lord Jesus
shall be revealed from Heaven with His mighty angels
in flaming fire, dealing out retribution to those who
do not know God and to those who do not obey the
gospel of our Lord Jesus. And these will pay the
penalty of eternal destruction, away from the
presence of the Lord and from the glory of His
power." 2 Thessalonians 1:7b-9. And so it is
throughout the New Testament. See also Mark 3:29;
Luke 13:24-28; John 5:24-29, 15:6; 2 Peter 2:4-9;
Jude 1:5-15: Revelation 13:10. NAS, 1978
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