J. Grant Swank, Jr.
A comment received to my article, AMERICA BELIEVES CHRIST IS GOD, reads as follows on ConservativeVoice Forum
http://www.theconservativevoice.com/forum/read.html?id=732:
“Grant,
I wonder if you are a football fan? Just because, if so, I hope you're
demanding to the team ownership that the whole team should be put to
death immediately. After all, a literal reading of the Bible does tell
us that anyone who works
on Sunday should be killed, right? And you've apparently linked belief in Christ with blindly following everything in the Bible.”
Here is the answer to that comment:
In the Old Testament, God commanded the
death penalty in twenty-some cases. This was not because God was barbaric, but because God was civil. The Israeli
twelve tribes had no
law enforcement agencies. Further, they were surrounded by barbarisms of strange magnitudes exhibited by neighboring pagan
nations.
Consequently,
for God to establish an Israeli civil community, He set forth stringent
punishments--some being the death penalty. He Himself became, in other
words, the
Law Enforcement Agency for the new nation of Israel. That chosen community thereby was to model morality / civility to the surrounding nations.
Extremely
severe penalties then were commanded by God in order to bring in line
an Israeli community which tended to be unruly like its neighbors. If
God had been lax in penalties, human nature, being what it is, would
have tested gladly the boundaries. But when penalties were severe,
human nature thought twice before testing the boundaries, hence the
death penalty prescribed by God in some instances.
However, once
Israel
lost its nationhood by "going a-whoring after other loves", Israel's
civil structure disappeared. Israel as a nation lost its temple, its
government--that is, its two primary components of culture--religion
and politics. Pagan nations then ruled over the heretofore nation of
God. In this loss was the disappearance of
death penalties
previously prescribed by God. The death penalty period as dictated by
divine revelation, in other words, ended near the close of the
Old Testament era.
That
is why when Jesus appeared as flesh-and-bones divine revelation, He
pronounced, "You used to say, 'An eye for an eye', but now I say to
you: Love your enemies." Jesus pronounced a civility of love toward
one's enemies. "Love your foes, pray for your foes." This was the
New Testament for it was now a new way of dealing with others--all others.
Government
was now established primarily within the believer rather than under
Israeli kings. "The Kingdom of God is within you." Law was now
primarily of the heart. "My law will be written on your hearts." That
was the new politic. Further, the tabernacle was now primarily the
human frame: "Your
body is the temple of the
Holy Spirit." That was the new religion.
Therefore, for the
New Testament Church Age,
it is the law of love toward all--friends and foes. Jesus provided a
simply stated ethic. He refused to garble it with amendments. But, one
may ask: "What about these atrocious crimes and the death penalty?"
The
biblical answer is still the same: love your friends and foes in Jesus.
What kind of Christian love then can be shown to a multiple-murderer /
rapist / arsonist / child molester? What kind of Christian love can be
meted out to a Hitler?
It is a Christian
tough love.
Tough love keeps the exceptional criminal alive but consigns that one
to supervised environs without parole. Hopefully, even that exceptional
criminal then may come upon redemption through Christ, yet never be
placed in tempting circumstances whereby he again may do others and
Himself harm.
Keeping the individual alive also allows the
possibility that, realizing human justice systems to be flawed, that
person in truth may be found innocent though originally pronounced
guilty. Indeed, the future may prove this to be fact if new evidence is
forthcoming. History has case files on those in the aforementioned
category.
Reason
this moral / ethical situation from God's perspective: Adam and Eve
slew God's love when they played loose with Eden's snake. However, God
did not slay them. Instead, God banished them to their own solitary
isles of remorse, hoping at least for their eternal redemption.
You
once slew God's love by going your own stubborn way. In reality, you
pronounced yourself Lord of your life. It is a hurtful truth to you now
that you are a believer; nevertheless, living once in sin and for sin,
you were once that callused toward your own loving Creator. However,
did God obliterate you? No, instead God searched you out, loved you
even while you were enemy, in hopes of redeeming what was left of your
destiny.
He
now invites each Christian to live out that same kind of persevering,
at-times-tough love toward all others--especially those who are Enemy.
God has already walked for us the path of love-for-foes. We, of all
creatures, should know this for sure. Praise be to a loving, merciful
God!
He then invites us to join Him on that love path. He has walked it for us. He asks us now to walk it for others.