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Ender
Guest
OKWill you please respond to the rest of the post?
I have already noted that there are times when it is inappropriate to impose the just punishment (the one the crime deserves), nor can anything I’ve said be taken to mean I oppose mercy. When you write that* "it **can *mean" something else that is a bit ambiguous. Unless justice **always **means something more complete than the “just punishment” then there are times when that punishment (in this case, execution) should be used, and I’ll point out again that the justness of a punishment is determined by the severity of the crime, not by any other usefulness it has to society.God acts mercifully, not indeed by going against His justice, but by doing something more than justice (this does not mean just punishment and something else besides. Indeed, it can mean something more complete than, yet different from the just punishment);
This is the obligation of the individual. The obligation of the State is to punish the wicked.The case is the same with one who pardons an offence committed against him, for in remitting it he may be said to bestow a gift. Hence the Apostle calls remission a forgiving: “Forgive one another, as Christ has forgiven you” (Ephesians 4:32)
I agree. In some cases mercy is appropriate but in others it is justice that* “appears more forcibly.”* This again supports the idea that the death penalty has its place as an act of justice that is independent of what is needed to protect society.Certain works are attributed to justice, and certain others to mercy, because in some justice appears more forcibly and in others mercy.
Now - will you respond to the question I asked in post #218?
Ender