T
TheOpenTheist
Guest
I appreciate your frankness and effort to clarify Icalise. You’re the real deal 
There is one more thing that you should consider in all of this, and that is the public response and perception to the catholic church’s stance on issues.
I say this because the decision to so greatly oppose the death penalty clearly has the response/perception of those who are not catholic in mind. Basicly, the catholic church does not want to come across as “judgmental” or as “unmerciful”. In short, public relations comes into play here.
What makes this so obvious are the reasons given for supporting an extremely limited use of the death penalty:
There is one more thing that you should consider in all of this, and that is the public response and perception to the catholic church’s stance on issues.
I say this because the decision to so greatly oppose the death penalty clearly has the response/perception of those who are not catholic in mind. Basicly, the catholic church does not want to come across as “judgmental” or as “unmerciful”. In short, public relations comes into play here.
What makes this so obvious are the reasons given for supporting an extremely limited use of the death penalty:
*]**When possible the government should use jails/prisons to protect the public instead of the death penalty.
]The death penalty is applied in an unjust manner in our system and, therefore, should not be implemented.
]Jesus taught that the death penalty was no longer necessary. Now we should forgive, not execute.
That these are fallacious arguments is evidenced by the following facts:
*]Prisons are unjust, inhumane, ineffective and in the Bible are ONLY practiced by pagan nations. God did not give imprisonment as a just punishment or as an “option”. And yes, Israel was very wealthy from the spoils of war and could have built big prisons, so Israel would have been able to use prisons had it been an option. Also, far fewer people would be murdered and fewer would also be executed if the death penalty were practiced the exact way God commanded it to be practiced. Throwing murderers and rapists and the like into prison does nothing to deter those crimes.
*]Just because the USA implements the death penalty contrary (in almost every way) to how God commanded it be done, does not mean that the correctly applied death penalty that God gave should not be used to deter crime and protect society. God’s death penalty is sure, swift, public and painful. The USA’s death penalty is unsure, greatly delayed, extremely unpainful and not public at all.
*]There is much New Testament support for the death penalty. Jesus upheld the command that He gave in Ex 21 that required children who curse father and mother to be executed (Mark 7; Matt 15). Paul taught that the government was doing a good thing when it exercised the sword (Rom 13:1-4) and even offered himself for the death penalty if he had committed anything worthy of death (Acts 25:11). Paul also tells us that the law is good if one uses it lawfully and then lists among them some laws that when broken require execution (1 Tim 1:8-10). And one of the most important passages promoting the death penalty as good, just and right in the New Testament is Heb 10:28 which shows the connection between the death penalty in the Law and the death penalty that is the second death. The law is our tutor that leads us to Christ (Gal 3:24). When we enforce bad law, it makes evangelism much harder.
So, that is why I cannot follow the teaching of the bishop in my area or even take him seriously on this topic. The reasoning is horrible, and what’s almost as bad, is the fact that many claim that our goal in sending these people to prison is to rehabilitate and reform them. HA! Sticking a rapist in a prison with other rapists is not an effective way to rehabilitate that person.
For more New Testament support for the death penalty check out this article
enyart.com/features/writings/death.shtml