Houston Chronicle Sunday

Capital question: Is the death penalty anti-Christian?

- By Mathew Schmalz

The state of Arkansas executed four prisoners on death row last month. Four other executions have been blocked by court order. And dialogues about the moral “rights” of this practice have been swirling around the news media, social medi and, probably, several morning coffee circles across the United States.

As a Catholic scholar who writes about religion, politics and policy, I understand how Christians struggle with the death penalty — there are those who cannot endure the idea and there are others who support its use. Some Christian theologian­s also have also observed that capital punishment could lead to the conversion of criminals who might repent of their crimes when faced with the finality of death.

But is the death penalty, which defies one of the Ten Commandmen­ts, anti-Christian? Naturally, there are two sides to this discussion. The balance

In its early centuries, Christiani­ty was seen with suspicion by authoritie­s. Writing in defense of Christians who were unfairly charged with crimes in second-century Rome, philosophe­r Anthenagor­as of Athens condemned the death penalty when he wrote that Christians “cannot endure even to see a man put to death, though justly.”

But as Christiani­ty became more connected with state power, European Christian monarchs and government­s regularly carried out the death penalty until its abolition in the 1950s through the European Convention on Human Rights. In the Western world, today, only the United States and Belarus retain capital punishment for crimes not committed during wartime.

According to a 2015 Pew Research Center Survey, support for the death penalty is falling worldwide. However, in the United States a majority of white Protestant­s and Catholics are in favor of it.

In the Hebrew Bible, Exodus 21:12 states that “whoever strikes a man so that he dies shall be put to death.” In Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus, however, rejects the notion of retributio­n when he says “if anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.”

While it is true that the Hebrew Bible prescribes capital punishment for a variety of offenses, it is also true that later Jewish jurists set out rigorous standards for the death penalty so that it could be used only in rare circumstan­ces. In support of death

At issue in Christian considerat­ions of the death penalty is whether the government or the state has the obligation to punish criminals and defend its citizens.

St. Paul, an early Christian evangelist, wrote in his letter to the Romans that a ruler acts as “an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer.” The Middle Ages in Europe saw thousands of murderers, witches and heretics put to death. While church courts of this period generally did not apply capital punishment, the church did turn criminals over to secular authoritie­s for execution.

Thirteenth-century Catholic philosophe­r Thomas Aquinas argued that the death penalty could be justified for the greater welfare of society. Later Protestant reformers also supported the right of the state to impose capital punishment. John Calvin, a Protestant theologian and reformer, for example, argued that Christian forgivenes­s did not mean overturnin­g establishe­d laws. The case against

The deterrence value of capital punishment remains an issue of debate. In the United States, there also are strong arguments that capital punishment is unfairly applied, especially to African-Americans.

Among Christian leaders, Pope Francis has been at the forefront of arguing against the death penalty. Saint John Paul II also maintained that capital punishment should be reserved only for “absolute necessity.”

Pope Francis observes that the death penalty is no longer relevant because modern prisons prevent criminals from doing further harm. Pope Francis speaks of a larger ethic of forgivenes­s. He emphasizes social justice for all citizens as well as the opportunit­y for those who harm society to make amends through acts that affirm life, not death.

Jesus’ admonition to forgive one’s enemies is often thought to do away with the “law of the talion,” or an “eye for an eye” retributio­n — a standard that goes as far back as the prebiblica­l Code of Hammurabi — a law code of ancient Mesopotami­a.

For many, the debate is about the relationsh­ip between Christ’s call for forgivenes­s and the legitimate powers of the state.

Those Christians who support capital punishment argue that Jesus was talking about heavenly realities, not the earthly matters that government­s have to deal with. Christians who oppose the death penalty say that being Christian means bringing heavenly realities to the here and now.

This debate is not just about capital punishment, but about what it means to be a Christian. Mathew Schmalz is associate professor of religion at College of the Holy Cross.

 ?? Tamir Kalifa / New York Times ?? Demonstrat­ors gather in front of the Arkansas Capitol building to protest the death penalty.
Tamir Kalifa / New York Times Demonstrat­ors gather in front of the Arkansas Capitol building to protest the death penalty.

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