**Has it occurred to you that maybe, just maybe, a death penalty can also sometimes be an act of God? **
Of course that has occured to me.
We seem to be getting way off here, from what I was trying to say.
Some posters are asserting that Justice in obedience to God
“strictly” “requires” that a killer be put to death. Note “strictly” and “requires.”
I am merely pointing out that there are many OTHER capital crimes, even in the
New Testament (read Paul’s list of them in Romans). These things are still capital crimes even though we are not under the Mosaic law covenant. It would seem to me
that “strict” justice in obedience to God would “require” the death penalty be always applied for these, too, but nobody (except folks like the late R.J. Rushdoony) is calling for this. And even in Old Testament times, these penalties were not always carried out with respect to all individuals.
Of COURSE murder is a sin that cries out to heaven for vengeance,
but it is not the only one that does, even if those specific words are not specifically used
in connection with those other capital offenses.
The Death Penalty is not a sin, and is not inherently sinful.
With all due respect to the good John Paul II, one gentle pope cannot overturn
2000 years of doctrinal tradition and teaching, especially when that teaching has been consistent. He CAN emphasize mercy over justice, but he CANNOT call something evil
that God has permitted and at times even commanded. John Paul II loathed the death penalty. I remember when he came to Saint Louis in 1999, he spoke out very forcefully demanding an end to the death penalty, period. It’s a good thing he didn’t try to declare this as something “ex cathedra,” because if he HAD, the sedevacantists would have a very good leg to stand on.
My point was never to say that the death penalty is always wrong. Not at all.
I was simply disagreeing with the position that it must always be applied in order
to satisfy Justice in obedience to God, or even more strongly, that to fail to apply it in
all cases is DISobedience to God.
Yes, I believe that God punishes people in THIS LIFE for their sins, also.
I am not a murderer, thank the Lord, but I do believe that I am currently being temporally
punished for my past sins against God. I deserve the punishment, but those I love DO NOT DESERVE IT, and they are being affected by it. So I am begging God for mercy and to let me suffer in Purgatory, if necessary, my deserved temporal afflictions.
And since I am begging for that mercy for myself,
how dare I NOT ask God for that same mercy, even upon the very WORST offenders?
That doesn’t mean that I condone brutality, violence, murder, rape, armed robbery, terrorism, kidnapping, or anything of the sort. Those are horrific things.
But I think we fail to note that just because OUR sins may not be violent sins,
that doesn’t mean that our sins are not extremely serious in the eyes of God.
And “no man is an island” is not true only with regard to murderers and other violent offenders. Our own sins DO affect those around us and in society. Maybe not as immediately as pulling out a gun and shooting someone, but they most definitely DO.
I never realized that until recently, and it is something sickening and horrifying to realize.
It is something heartbreaking to realize.
Lord, have mercy.