Capital
Punishment and the Gospel
You have heard that it was said, 'You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.' But I say to you, Love your enemies . . . . Matt. 5:43
In
September, 1995 the Wisconsin legislature once again considered enacting capital
punishment -- the killing of convicted criminals -- in our state.
Wisconsin abolished capital punishment 141 years ago.
Of course, states can enact such laws as the majority endorses.
These laws may be morally good, neutral, or evil.
A new capital punishment statute would put the state in the business
of killing. What is most appalling,
reeking of hypocrisy here, is the fact that many religious people are saying
that capital punishment is morally good, righteous, and even compatible with
the Gospel! Some political organizations
that label themselves Christian, loudly advocate capital punishment as well.
If the state conducts executions, it will be another triumph of violence.
That will be one thing. But
for Christians to promote such state violence is another thing.
And this is the unrighteousness I address -- not that of a violent state,
but that of Christians.
I
am very grateful that the Orthodox Church in America, at its 9th All American
Council in St. Louis in 1989, passed resolutions condemning both abortion and
capital punishment as unrighteous and evil.
Both are killing. The distinction
of innocent and guilty victims, that it's evil to kill the first and all right
to kill the second -- is not a New Testament concept at all.
Some use such a distinction to condemn abortion on the one hand (as it
must be condemned) and then to advocate capital punishment at the same time.
Such a distinction and contradiction cannot be found in the Gospel or
justified by it. In reality, all
such killing harms not only its victims, but also its perpetrators -- and the
society that espouses it.
In
the case of capital punishment, the basic motive (if truth be told) is not deterrence
but retribution -- vengeance, to use a less polite word.
In fact, the public outcry for capital punishment is clearly and admittedly
a cry for vengeance. Vengeance
not by God at His Judgment, but my men here and now.
We can find many references to such vengeance in the Old Testament; but
how can the Gospel of Christ be twisted and misconstrued to justify it? Can the spirit of the Gospel be so misinterpreted?
What's more, how can those who claim to be Biblical literalists and fundamentalists
so ignore the direct meaning of Jesus' words?
To give him credit, Pope John Paul II in his recent encyclical calls
both abortion and capital punishment evils, unconscionable acts of violence.
Unfortunately, many who call themselves "conservative" Catholics
will take
only one part of his statement seriously and brush off the other part, just
as they have done with the many papal pronouncements on nuclear arms and economic
and social justice.
The
Gospel's Testimony on Killing and Vengence
1)
"And forgive us our debts as we have forgiven our debtors . . .
" (Matt. 6:12)
2)
"Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth . . . "
(Matt. 5:5)
For
I will leave in the midst of you a meek and lowly people.
They shall seek refuge in the name of the Lord, those who are left in
Israel . . . . For they shall pasture and lie down, and none shall make them
afraid. (Zepheniah 3:12-13)
The
clearest interpretation for Jesus' use of the word "meek" can be seen
in Psalm 37 (LXX 36):8-11 from which He evidently derived the passage in the
Beatitudes: Refrain from anger, and forsake wrath. Fret not yourself; it tends only to evil.
But
the meek shall possess the land, and delight themselves in an abundance of peace.
The psalm tells us to leave the vindication of the righteous to God.
We are to be meek -- gentle, patient, long-suffering -- till God brings about
His justice in His time. Will the
state ever exist in such patient meekness?
Evidently not; but the state belongs to this age which is passing away.
Christians belong to the age to come.
It cannot be Gospel-loving Christians who cry out for the state to carry
out violent and bloody vengeance. It
is the meek, not those who demand an eye for an eye, who are the blessed inheritors
of the Kingdom. So says the Word
of God. In fact, He says that He
Himself is "meek and lowly in heart," and that we are to take up ourselves
the "light" and "easy" yoke of this lowly meekness.
(Matt. 11:29).
3)
Jesus is the King who comes to us "meek and sitting upon an ass
. . . " (Matt. 21:5)
The
mission of Jesus takes place on earth in lowliness and meekness.
His life is not a life at court; it characterizes Him as the lowly in
heart, i.e., the One who is fixed wholly on God . . . . In Matthew 21:5, with
the help of the fulfilled prophecy of Zachariah 9:9, the entry of Jesus (into
Jerusalem) is depicted as that of a nonviolent, non-warlike king of salvation
and peace. In this respect, Jesus stands radically opposed to the Zealots
and to all champions of a political Messianism. In the Beatitude of Matthew 5:5 we read of the "meek"
who on the basis of their oppressed situation, acknowledge not their own will
but the great and gracious will of God.
To them Jesus promises the inheritance of the coming aeon, which includes
. . . secure dwelling in their own land. (V. Hauck, S. Schulz, Theological Dictionary of the New Testament,
Vol. VI, p. 649.)
We
who assume the name Christian are to follow Him in the way of meekness and lowliness.
We cannot venerate the Lord, while we follow a way other than the one
He treads before us.
4)
On several occasions, Jesus Christ comes face to face with the issue
of violence for retribution or self-defense, with the issue of capital punishment.
In John 8, Jesus comes to the Temple, sits down as a rabbi would, and
teaches the people. The scribes
and Pharisees gather to put Him to the test.
They bring forward a woman caught in adultery, presumably a married woman.
The penalty prescribed for this in Deuteronomy 22 is death by stoning.
(Incidentally, there are some countries, like Saudi Arabia, where adultery
is a capital offense for women today.)
According
to John 18:31, the Romans had taken away from the Jews the right to administer
capital punishment. The hypocrites
who test Jesus ask him about applying the Deuteronomic law, and demand, "What
do you say about her?" This
is meant as a trap for Jesus, involving both the Jewish law and the prerogatives
of the Roman state. But Jesus simply
bends down and writes "with his finger on the ground," just as His
divine finger once inscribed the Law upon the tablets of stone on Sinai.
Then He says, "Let him who is without sin among you be the first
to throw a stone at her." And
again He bends down to write in the dust.
The
words He writes send the strict enforcers of the law of retribution stealing
away in silent confusion. Jesus
turns to the condemned woman: "Woman,
where are they?" He asks.
"Has no one condemned you?"
She answers, "No one, Lord."
No one-neither the self-righteous nor God.
"Neither," He says, "do I condemn you; go and do not sin
again." (John 8:2-11)
Now
apparently this account found its way into New Testament manuscripts in only
the third century. Thus its importance
becomes even more clear for Christian ethics in the
worldly society in which the early Church existed. The point is this: The Word of God foregoes enforcement of
the strict law of retribution. This
is not just a personal commutation of sentence.
For He also dispels the condemners who would take God's authority over
life and death upon themselves. To
avoid falling prematurely into a political trap, Jesus does this silently, by
shaming the devotees of capital punishment.
By His actions He sets aside the law of retaliation.
Likewise,
in the Sermon on the Mount, He overturns the principle of retaliation expressed
in the Old Testament (Exodus 21:24, Deuteronomy 19:21):
Do
you see how much farther the Word of God goes than just forbidding vengeance?
He commands forgiveness and even love of persecutors.
(Matt. 5:43-44, Luke 6:27-28).
We poor sinners may fail to carry out this command; but let us not confuse
the spirit of the Gospel with the barbaric cry for blood-vengeance that rise
from the same mouths that dare to say, "Our Father . . . forgive us our
trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us."
Jesus
Provides the Example
Does
Jesus merely tell us how to deal with those who offend and transgress?
No. He provides the example,
an evangelic example that we can only set aside if we want to give up Christ
altogether and return to the Old Law.
When the evildoers come to seize Him in Gethsemane so that they can inflict
upon Him an unjust death, an apostle takes a sword and slashes off the ear of
one of those who come to seize and slay the Son of God.
But Jesus says to him: "Put
your sword back into its place; for all who take the sword will perish by the
sword." (Matt. 26:52) Then, according to Luke 22:51, He touches the ear of the wounded
man and heals him.
The
constant interpretation of this passage in early Christian times was that wielders
of the sword of vengeance -- the
judge, the executioner, (by modern standards, the judge or jurist seeking the
death penalty) -- all these fall under this threat.
They all participate, as the murderous criminal does, in the shedding
of blood, the taking of life. And
they too become marked by the experience, cursed by their own bloodletting.
St.
Cyprian, the 3rd century bishop-martyr of Carthage, makes it clear that it doesn't
matter whether the murderous retaliation comes from an individual or from the
state. Killing is killing.
Finally,
we have Jesus' ultimate sermon of active love on the cross.
The mob cries out for capital punishment for him, marking themselves
with blood: "His blood be
on us . . . . " (Matt. 27:25)
They call for the death penalty for Him -- one of the countless times
from that day to this that innocent people have been sentenced by courts to
die. But the God-Man, hanging beaten, mocked, and naked upon the
cross, wants no vengeance. His
words resound in our ears and throughout all time, the living testimony of God
for all who really look to Him to know the way of life: "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do"(Luke
23:24).
Not
avenge them, not slay them, but "forgive them."
The answer to this question of capital punishment, and to every question
of violence, is not to be found in the words of political theorists, of demagogues,
of talk show babblers, or even of the aggrieved victims of violent crime.
The answer is to be found in the words and actions of Jesus Christ, who
is always the Father's positive answer, His "Yes" to life.
Fr. Thomas Mueller is the parish priest at SS Cyril and Methodius Orthodox Church, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Dean of the Chicago Deanery.
Taken from the OCA Resource Handbook for Lay Ministries
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