Austin American-Statesman

‘Thou shalt not kill’ should inspire Gaza cease-fire

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Thou shall not kill. It is one of the fundamenta­l values shared by the world’s religious traditions. It seems very straightfo­rward. There is no ambiguity in the commandmen­t — it is a seemingly easy principle.

Yet, in so many cases we tend to accept the idea that killing can be necessary and even justified. Capital punishment, self- defense, mercy killing, collateral damage, war — we have multitudes of exceptions and justifications for breaking the commandmen­t.

These past few months, we have seen unimaginab­le violence unleashed on such a small and densely populated strip of land. The images from Gaza have bled through our phones. The images of suffering children and parents in despair have left us with heartache. Our heartache also extends to the hostages lost in the same rubble. There seems to be no solace or remedy for the bloodshed in Gaza, and the number of victims rises daily.

With anguish and heartache, many across the globe are asking what could bring the violence to an end. My heart gravitates back to the ancient principle and commandmen­t, “Thou shall not kill.”

The answer is actually not complicate­d. It is simple.

No killing. No taking of life. And, even more, we must come together to ensure that every human being has access to human flourishing and human dignity. That means we must resist our tendency to justify killing — to see it as inevitable.

Those of us who are religious must stand with our religious and non-religious neighbors to have the moral imaginatio­n to cast visions for a world where political solutions are our friends and companion — not violence. We must commit to our traditions’ core values that stand firmly against the taking of life. There is nothing offensive or controvers­ial about standing against the taking of life.

“Thou shall not kill” speaks most loudly to us at this moment in history. This commandmen­t can stand on its own, and not be followed by “except” “but” or “however.” There should be no gray areas. We must not deceive ourselves about what is good and right. Thou shall not justify the killing of another; thou shall not kill.

In the name of the sacredness of life, cease-fire now.

Crystal Silva-McCormick is an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ and serves on the steering committee of the UCC Palestine Israel Network. Doing Good Together is compiled by Interfaith Action of Central Texas, interfaith­texas.org.

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