This is not a problem, it’s reality. Of course morality, or at least our understanding of morality and the obligations required to lead a Christian life, change over time. The ownership of slaves is no longer acceptable for Christians, though it was once permissible. The imprisonment by Church authorities of those who taught against the Church and her doctrines was once thought acceptable, but that has also changed. Such imprisonment today would be labeled as a miscarriage of justice and an abuse of power. Burning heretics at the stake was once thought a moral thing to do, but I believe most Christians believe it to be immoral today . . . though I could be wrong about that one. Isolating lepers from society was also thought to be a moral act. We know better today. In fact, Jesus himself knew better 2,000 years ago. It is not necessarily that morality changes, but that we change to conform ourselves to a greater and deeper understanding of what constitutes moral action. Actions of the past, though thought to be moral at the time, are not thought to be moral today in the light of the development of doctrine and our understanding of what Christ calls us to. We are constantly attempting to conform ourselves to the will of God. Our understanding of the death penalty and how it contradicts the life of a Christian has developed and continues to be developed. I predict that in time there will be no tolerance for the death penalty among Christians at all.