I'm really curious about pro-death penalty Christians. Do you guys have a different Bible than I read, or do you just skip the gospel of Christ part?
3/16/2015 9:46:32 PM
I'm a Christian, but I think a country run according to the Bible would be a disaster. Which is fine, because that's not what the Bible is for. It provides moral guidance for the individual, and -- arguably and at any rate to a lesser extent -- the church. It does not provide instructions on how to run a government.I also don't support the death penalty as a means to get revenge or even "justice," in a certain sense. The death penalty, properly applied, removes persistent threats. "Revenge" is not a Christian motive; it leads to a cycle of violence and seeks to supplant divine retribution. However, I don't think the New Testament is unequivocally opposed to stopping a threat, even through lethal force.
3/17/2015 4:56:01 AM
3/17/2015 8:49:00 AM
With some people I'm sure it doesn't add up. They've got their vengeful bloodlust thing going on, and that's pretty much impossible to square with the morality laid down in the New Testament.But as I said in my first post, I don't think the NT is 100%, ironclad, unequivocally against killing somebody to stop them doing bad stuff. Actually it doesn't spend much time on the subject of force at all. Peter is told to put away his sword at the arrest of Jesus, for any one of a dozen possible reasons -- Jesus had work for Peter to do that didn't involve him getting killed by the far more numerous soldiers, or Jesus didn't want anybody to interfere because, after all, you can't have resurrection without the passion first. "Offer the other cheek" also doesn't hand down a clear instruction -- it has been interpreted as a command to leave retribution to civil authorities rather than trying to go all "eye for an eye" on your own -- and besides, it only offers instruction on how to react to somebody who injures you. What if someone stabs your kid? You supposed to offer him your other kid?For my part, I sleep easy because I believe that the death penalty, properly applied, results in fewer people getting killed. God doesn't like it when people get killed and neither do I, so if rearranging the "who gets killed" list lowers the number, well, great.
3/17/2015 9:43:05 AM
3/17/2015 10:44:43 AM
Straight outta the googles
3/17/2015 11:04:53 AM
what if that "garbage" has been wrongfully convicted?
3/17/2015 11:16:21 AM
Then we wouldn't want to execute them, now would we? But that's not an argument against the death penalty itself, or anything related to a Christian context.
3/17/2015 11:43:54 AM
3/17/2015 11:52:53 AM
3/17/2015 11:59:38 AM
3/17/2015 12:22:39 PM
but death
3/17/2015 12:25:09 PM
Issuing parking tickets = killing peopleWell I'm convinced
3/17/2015 12:47:47 PM
if the death penalty is moral when the person killed is guilty, then it would be moral if it was certain that the person is guilty. Even if this is impossible, it shows that with that logic the death penalty itself is not flawed (instead the process, or trial, is flawed). If your response to questions about the death penalty is that we can't always know who is guilty, so it's bad, then you are implicitly agreeing that the concept of the death penalty itself is okay. However even the guilty can be forgiven by God, so from a christian-moral perspective this isn't good enough.[Edited on March 17, 2015 at 12:49 PM. Reason : .]
3/17/2015 12:47:55 PM
3/17/2015 4:08:07 PM
I've noticed that so far that's the only response: a flat refusal to accept any comparison. We are talking about differences in scale here... Would it make you more comfortable if instead of parking tickets I referred to "the psychological scarring, violence, possible sexual abuse, and total absence of hope for future employment that come with a lengthy prison sentence?" Or is it still impossible to compare that to the death penalty? Don't talk to me about "the vast majority of cases." I'm not in favor of the death penalty in "the vast majority of cases." I am in favor of it for the minority of cases with the risk factors I mentioned. Organized crime, for example; its leaders and members routinely continue directing and committing crimes in prison. I'll come up with some greater detail tomorrow when I have computer internet rather than just the phone.
3/17/2015 5:27:56 PM
3/17/2015 6:04:47 PM
thats what the 'may god have mercy on our souls' part is about
3/17/2015 6:06:16 PM
I understood grumpy's analogy and made a comment that his logic was fine Its still not good enough to justify the disconnect of Christians who support the death penalty
3/17/2015 6:16:42 PM
The death penalty is just an express lane to divine judgement. We're just expediting the meeting. Christians shouldn't have a problem with this.
3/17/2015 6:17:50 PM
3/17/2015 7:09:20 PM
unless youre hindu
3/17/2015 11:26:42 PM
3/18/2015 4:59:04 AM
God doesn't care if someone is guilty or not, he will still forgive them
3/18/2015 12:58:19 PM
It's hypocritical to be a Christian and support the death penalty, but humans are hypocrites, and especially Christians. It's hypocritical to be against the death penalty but support abortion. Or to be against abortion on the grounds it's taking an innocent life, but supprt the death penalty (which we know has taken and will take innocent lives).The fact of the matter is that there's not a logical rule set that covers the common beliefs most people have regarding when it's okay for our government to kill someone in our name. It mostly boils down to how distant we feel from the situation, and how angry we get at the instant we hear about what someone has done.Our military has certainly killed babies, both born and unborn, in our names, they've killed, maimed, and tortured innocent men, women, and children, but they are heroes because of the perceived greater good. But when cops incidentally kill innocent people in pursuit of their perceived greater good, then most people vilify and demonize them. If someone could come up with a logical framework for what to do in all these situations, or what's morally right, that wouldn't require rebuilding society from scratch, I'd buy them a case of the finest beer.But whether a certain type of killing is wrong is entirely a matter of social biases and how inconvenient it is to our lives; there's no logic to it. We get mad at cops who screw up and kill an innocent because that could be us, but we don't care if a soldier does the same because it will never affect us. We support the death penalty because we hear about heinous people that we'd kill ourselves, or we're against the death penalty because someone we know could easily be wrongly convicted and lose any chance at life.
3/18/2015 1:52:22 PM
3/18/2015 2:00:19 PM
3/18/2015 2:40:07 PM
3/18/2015 2:42:16 PM
3/18/2015 2:57:57 PM
This thread is missing some good old fashioned vengeance! Something Christians are very obviously full of (as well as most humans).Let's chalk this one up to the evolution of the religion; a sign of the times if you will. We don't stone gays, we allow tattoos, we cut our beards, we eat shellfish, etc....and we poke heinous criminals with a death needle! You give some, you lose some, I always say.
3/18/2015 3:00:46 PM
3/18/2015 3:36:17 PM
3/18/2015 3:39:52 PM
what do you mean by believe? if you mean that christians are supposed to follow old testament law, then no.
3/18/2015 3:40:55 PM
3/18/2015 3:42:29 PM
No, that's not what I mean. But they hold the Old Testament out as truth, but Christ absolves the need for following the strict tenants of the Old Testament. That doesn't meant that the Old Testament becomes irrelevant.[Edited on March 18, 2015 at 3:44 PM. Reason : ^about half do. I personally, don't. But that doesn't mean it's hypocritical if you do.]
3/18/2015 3:43:21 PM
you are confused about the new covenant thing[Edited on March 18, 2015 at 3:47 PM. Reason : nah]
3/18/2015 3:46:00 PM
If you want to know, I searched for Christians AND Capital Punishment.Please explain how I am confused about the new covenant? I am interested to hear your thoughts.[Edited on March 18, 2015 at 3:48 PM. Reason : ^I like the link, you should have left it in there.]
3/18/2015 3:46:47 PM
are you a christian? why don't you follow old testament teachings?[Edited on March 18, 2015 at 3:54 PM. Reason : i can't possibly be the only person who read leviticus to survive boring sermons as a kid]
3/18/2015 3:52:37 PM
Because I don't have to. The Old Testament laws were God's method for granting entrance into Heaven, showing his people how to worship or distinguish themselves from the gentiles, or atone for their sins. With Christ, and his sacrifice, we no longer have to do those things anymore. Christ is the only way into Heaven, he absolves the need to wear long beards and hats on our heads and boxes on our foreheads. There are still many of the same trends and edicts for sinning repeated in the New Testament, but the reason you don't find the dietary restrictions, or things like that is they aren't necessary in a world where Christ is the method of obtaining eternal life, and nothing else.[Edited on March 18, 2015 at 3:59 PM. Reason : ]
3/18/2015 3:58:16 PM
so you ignore those laws but follow old testament support for capital punishment because...?
3/18/2015 4:00:00 PM
No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying that you have to read both together. You cannot understand the history or background if you ignore or discount as irrelevant, the Old Testament. Nothing in the New Testament prohibits capital punishment, so the NT isn't a trump card on supporting capital punishment.I have never said we are bound by capital punishment or that it's necessary, but that I don't see a conflict with Christianity. I understand the thought process of those who choose to support it.[Edited on March 18, 2015 at 4:06 PM. Reason : ]
3/18/2015 4:04:32 PM
3/18/2015 4:17:05 PM
^^but you cited the old testament as support:
3/18/2015 4:17:08 PM
3/18/2015 4:18:32 PM
3/18/2015 4:23:54 PM
not even when jesus literally stopped a capital punishment?
3/18/2015 4:25:39 PM
3/18/2015 4:29:19 PM
^^No, it wasn't capital punishment, that was vigilante justice. He didn't stop his own capital punishment, or those of the men hanging beside him.And he never spoke out against government punishment including death.
3/18/2015 4:31:02 PM
"Forty percent of Catholics say they're against capital punishment, double the number of evangelical or fundamentalist Christians." != ""about half" of the world's Christians support[ing] the death penalty,"
3/18/2015 4:38:24 PM
If 40% of Catholics, and 20% of Protestants oppose, then yes, that does mean that "about half" of Christians support it.
3/18/2015 4:40:41 PM