H
happilycatholic
Guest
[/QUOTE]That the law was rarely applied does not make it any less reprehensible. If you want to go that route, all you’re showing is that the Jews were more just in the application of the law than God was in its proclamation.
It’s not the law that was rarely applied, but the punishment, first. Second, how in the world do you arrive at “the Jews” being more just in their application of the law than God was??? OMG! First you are lumping a lot of people into “the Jews”. There were very few “Jews” that were even allowed to apply the Law, as you say. Those people were in a position of leadership over ‘most’ of “the Jews” you speak of.
Furthermore, Jesus (being God and Jew by the way) makes minced meat of your comment altogether. You are using generalization to the inth degree here.
When the 613 Mitzvot were given by God to Moses, the punishments were set forth for “capital” crimes. It was up to the judges to decide what were capital crimes, giving them A LOT of room for mistake and misinterpretation and thereby giving them room to ABUSE said power.
Addressed. No, wait…you keep trying to imply that the Scripture and the Mitzvot say that if the woman doesn’t scream, she was raped. Where do you get that? You are taking the Scripture and plotting it against itself. There can be NO capital punishment without a trial! In that trial the woman would probably be found innocent. The Scripture is laying out the charge and punishment if a man/woman should be found guilty.The standard of proof is flawed, too. First of all, the witnesses did not have to be sinless, or the Kingdom of Israel would have had no executions whatsoever. Secondly, and much more importantly, the standard of proof is irrelevant. It doesn’t matter if a rape is witnessed by Diogenes, George Washington, and Honest Abe, recorded from twelve camera angles, and notarized by God Himself. The victim is not
Dude, I’m CATHOLIC. I am AGAINST the death penalty! Can you set aside your determination to bring us all into the awareness that God showed us how do discipline ourselves? I think we’re all in agreement that stoning is horrible. I’m pretty sure that’s why we don’t do it today. But just because it was the prescribed punishment for certain sins in the OT doesn’t mean that it contridicts anything. Nor does it prove a change in God’s moral Law set forth in the Commandments, which is where this all started.
It’s pretty obvious to Christians that it is necessary to have discipline and punishment. I hope this doesn’t clash with some atheist belief that we should all just run around willy nilly? No, I know it doesn’t. So how can you say stoning is any more barbaric that the electric chair? Those who die in the electric chair do suffer. It’s been proven. What about the gas chamber? They suffer horribly. In the Mitvot, it also prescribes, strangulation, death by sword, and by fire. How do you propose one should be put to death in Biblical times with humane means?
And I’m surprised to see that you still haven’t addressed the fact that in the NT, death is no longer called for as atonement for sin. You have to realize that all those crimes were seen as sin first and foremost. Isreal had no way to atone for sin that would bring them salvation. God addressed that issue when He came to us in human form.
:console::crying: AAAUAHAUAGHHHHHH!!!