part two of post.
I wonder if writers like Mr. Jackson of the Church of Christ understand what they are advocating sometimes. They speak of Christians having the obligation to pay their debt to society, etc. And that’s fine. But does Society have CARTE BLANCHE from God to impose any old penalty at all, regardless of the fairness or unfairness of the penalty? How would justice be served, for example, by putting a peaceful, repentant Christian into a prison, where he is to be daily subjected to an environment filled with horrendous racism, abominably filthy talk, violence, blasphemy, gang activity, sodomy and the likelihood of being raped or murdered? How is that a “fitting” punishment of someone who has dedicated his or her life to Christ and wants to walk according to the Holy Spirit?
One of the guys from my Church, now elderly, told me about something that happened when he was 20. He went into a bar, underage. An officer came in, spotted him, and asked him for an i.d. When he reached to get it, the officer became startled and maced him in the face. Then he subdued him, arrested him, and took him off to the County Jail. Now, this was a naive, nonviolent 20 year old kid. They threw this KID into a big cell filled with violent criminals. 15 of these thugs surrounded him and pulled out their genitals and demanded that he service all of them. They were ready to rape him, all of them, when a huge man of his own Race, intervened, rescued him, and threatened the would-be rapists with death if they bothered him again. He was fortunate.
But how is being gang-raped a fitting punishment for a nonviolent kid who broke the Law by going into a bar and tried to buy some liquor when underage?
To suggest that God would approve of such a “punishment” seems to me
to border on Blasphemy Against the Holy Spirit.
Some folks parrot such sayings as “if you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime,”
and “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.” Well, the first slogan is not from God’s word. There is a certain truth to it, but it is not inspired scripture.
And “an eye for an eye” was an attempt to LIMIT the severity of punishments, not make them more severe. A person who shoplifts, for example, can be put away for years.
Now, shoplifting is very, very wrong and it is stealing. And it should be punished. But, like it or not, sending a person away for years to be subjected to extreme violence, rape, blasphemy, gang-racism and daily abuse, is not in harmony with Biblical principles. In the bible, a person who stole was to pay back the amount stolen or the items stolen, and even to pay it back several times over. When the thieving tax-collector Zaccheus embraced the Lord Jesus, he offered to pay back those he had defrauded four-fold. Jesus said, today salvation has come to this man. Jesus did not instruct Zaccheus to go and turn himself in to the magistrates to be sent to jail in addition. Nor did St. Paul anywhere recorded in scripture, instruct any Christians, some of whom were former thieves, to go and turn themselves in to the magistrates to be civilly punished. They were to repent of their former deeds, and that was it (now, unspoken, is the godly idea of making restitution to those they had stolen from).
I think we all need to respect the need for law and order and honesty and decency.
Violent people need to be removed from Society. They even need to be removed from other offenders, whom they prey upon. There are no easy answers to any of this. The U.S. Bishops issued a document some years back stressing the need, where possible, for rehabilitation instead of retribution/vengeance. The fact that the State has the right to bear the sword against wrongdoing does not give the State Carte Blanche to do whatever it wants. It does not give the State the right to subject people to extreme violence, brutality, rape, stabbing, blasphemy, abuse, subhuman living conditions and horrific filth as punishment or as a way to pay debt owed to Society. And no sinner, however repentant, has any right in this life, to self-righteously sit back and demand extreme and harsh punishments, except for the most violent, incorrigible offenders. Such people should rather consider themselves lucky that their own crimes against the Laws of God (their sins), repented of, are not punished by the civil authorities any more. At
one time, they WERE.