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When death becomes a penalty, can life be blessed?
Wednesday, 17 January 2007 06:54
Marc Mullinax
"Any manës death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee."
ÇƒÓ John Donne
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MARS HILL ÇƒÓ I used to believe the Bible was specifically anti-death penalty. I was wrong, but I am still anti-death penalty.

When I cited the Bible to reinforce my anti-death penalty penchant, I used both Testaments. "Thou shalt not kill" sounded pretty straightforward. And when Jesus had a chance to join in vigilante justice against the woman caught in adultery (John 8), he declined. "Those without sin, cast the first stone." Yep, I concluded, the Bible is anti-death penalty.


However, when I studied the Bible more academically, I learned how wrong I was. When Exodus 20:13 actually states, "You shall not murder," thatës exactly what it had in mind: murder and vigilante justice. It did not have in mind a state permanently removing its criminal elements. Such "eliminations" were as acceptable to biblical culture as it is to ours today.

I also found out how likely that the story from John 8 was perhaps not a part of the original text. Only one Greek manuscript has it older than 500 CE, and we have many other manuscripts older than that, without it. Long story short, this story about the woman caught in adultery might be authentic, or it could be wishful thinking by early Christianity. Though a great story, the textual evidence might ÇƒÓ or might not ÇƒÓ explicitly support my pro-life position.

The person responsible for the most number of murdered innocents in recent years is dead. If there was ever a person deserving the death penalty, Saddam Hussein seems to have been that person. Now dead, do you feel safer than when he was alive?


His sham trial, and his too-early execution means that thousands of Kurds with grievances against Hussein will have no place for their stories to be heard by the world.


The typical knee-jerk anti-death penalty (liberal) position invokes tired arguments: the death penalty doesnët bring victims back, or satisfy the survivors, and the appeals process for a death row inmate costs many lifetimes of life-imprisonment costs.


But Iëm a person of faith, who believes the Bible true, and thus knows that God loves this world more than we could ever suspect.


I believe God is supremely pro-life, with love-plans for us all. Saddamës death by hateful wills corrected nothing, and perhaps ended his future appointments with grace. If you really wanted to punish him, make him spend his life in prison reading the Qurëan, which is a surprising book. God (or Allah), who designed Saddam for a life quite different from the one he led, had not yet ended His plans for him.


Nor is God not finished with any of us. While weëre all under some penalty of death (the bell tolls for thee), we havenët the right to foreclose on what God may be doing.


I started out above with the Bible supporting a no-death-penalty approach, and outlined my revision of this. Now I revise again: The death penalty is murder, which violates the Ten Commandments. All killings of Godës creation before their time, whether through war, or national policy, is ÇƒÓ letës call a spade a spade ÇƒÓ murder.


Husseinës death was as premature as yours would be if you were murdered. If we do not lead the lives we are supposed to, may some judge give us the grace to live long enough to know that correction for ourselves. What we would wish for ourselves, we should extend to others.


We are not wise enough to know what God has in store. Every personës untimely death diminishes this world because it prematurely cuts a minute thread of Godës will, and sometimes this world, or someoneës world, hangs by a thread.


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Dr. Marc S. Mullinax, chairman of the philosophy and religion departments at Mars Hill College, can be reached at mmullinax-at-mhc.edu.

 



 


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