[Vision2020] Baptist Theologian Calls for Abolition of Death Penalty
keely emerinemix
kjajmix1 at msn.com
Tue Feb 20 17:03:23 PST 2007
David Gushee is the kind of Baptist you never hear much about -- Biblically
faithful and, because of it, entirely able to see the horror that is capital
punishment. I first came across his work when I was a member of
Evangelicals for Social Justice, founded by another of my heroes, Ron Sider.
Sider's seminal work, "Rich Christians In An Age of Hunger," was answered
by the reconstructionists (the followers and heirs of Rushdooney, North, et
al) with "Productive Christians In An Age Of Guilt-Mongers." I think that
explains all I pretty much needed to know about the cesspool of theology
known as reconstructionism, and if I weren't an evangelical, writers like
Gushee and Sider would make me seriously consider becoming one.
keely
From: <nickgier at adelphia.net>
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Baptist Theologian Calls for Abolition of Death
Penalty
Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2007 10:38:19 -0800
Professor David Gushee, Graves Professor of Moral Philosophy at Union
University in Jackson, Tennessee, called for a national halt to executions
because the death penalty as a public policy "fails the most basic standards
of justice." Prof. Gushee, writing for the Associated Baptist Press, stated
that the recent moratorium in Tennessee surrounding lethal injection
problems should be extended to review the entire application of the death
penalty, and that other states should take similar action.
Prof. Gushee wrote:
In a move that received very little attention, Gov. Phil Bredesen recently
suspended all executions in Tennessee until May, pending a full review of
what he called our âsloppyâ execution procedures. The governor is to be
commended for this brave and wise decision.
But I suggest that he take this opportunity to review not just the execution
procedures, but the entire application of the death penalty in this state.
That will take far longer than a few months. We need a death penalty
moratoriumânot just in Tennessee but in all states.
When the Supreme Court ruled in 1976 that states could resume executions,
they mandated that any state doing so must apply this ultimate penalty in a
fair and consistent, rather than arbitrary and capricious, manner. No one
can honestly look at the current application of the death penalty in
Tennessee and believe that we have met that test.
Tennesseeâs death-penalty sentencing is rife with error. Half of all death
sentences in our state are overturned on appeal due to serious
constitutional error, according to a study by the Tennessean. That number
does not include those sitting on death row who are, in all likelihood,
innocent of the crimes for which they were convicted. One example is Paul
House, awaiting execution for over 20 years despite uncontested DNA evidence
that he did not rape the woman he was accused of murdering (rape being the
stateâs theory of the crime). In June 2006, the U.S. Supreme Court found
that âviewing the record as a whole, no reasonable juror would have lacked
a reasonable doubt.â
Then thereâs the way that race affects the use of the death penalty. It is
really no coincidence that public-opinion polling finds far less support for
capital punishment among blacks than among whites. National studies
repeatedly find both race-of-perpetrator and race-of-victim bias in
death-penalty sentencing. In Tennessee and most states, racial/ethnic
minorities are vastly over-represented on death row, and a full quarter of
African-Americans on Tennesseeâs death row were sentenced by all-white
juries.
Besides race, social class is another distorting factor in the use of the
death penalty. If you donât have money for an attorney, your goose is
cooked. In Tennessee, nearly every one of the 102 people on death row could
not afford an attorney at trial. With all due respect to our public
defenders, if my life were on the line I would want the best private
attorney that money could buy. But that is not an option for almost anyone
who faces this situation in our stateâwith predictable results.
We have to be careful and systematic in our thinking here. It is not logical
to respond to this evidence by affirming oneâs visceral support for the
principle of life-for-life. Fine, for argumentâs sake, letâs grant that
for a moment. Would not such a passion for justice also require the fair
application of this penalty? Would we not also want to assure such basics as
the actual guilt of the people we are executing, the class-blind and
color-blind application of this penalty and the opportunity for adequate
legal representation? Would we also want to be sure that the people we are
executing are morally responsible for their actions, rather than clinically
insane, as are a number of our death row inmates?
Nationally, the application of the death penalty is about as rational and
orderly as who wins the lottery. Thousands of people murder and are murdered
each year. A small number of (mainly southern) states execute the great
majority of those convicted of murder. Evidentiary requirements vary. Which
particular types of murder are eligible for capital sentencing vary. Appeals
processes vary. Quality of legal representation varies. In the end, a small
percentage of convicted murderers get the death penalty, and an even smaller
group is actually executed. And more and more, across the country, DNA
evidence is showing up to exonerate a significant minority of those
executed. How many innocent executed persons is too many?
It would take another column to review the biblical arguments, which in the
South are a profound factor in support for the death penalty. Even if we
were to take the Old Testament alone as our guide, it requires the
eyewitness testimony of two or three witnesses (Deut. 17:6), a stricter
standard than our own. It also requires that the justice system ânot show
partialityâ (Deut. 16:19) and therefore that every accused person be
treated similarly. And this is not even to consider the profound issues
raised by the New Testamentâs focus on mercy.
As of now, at least, the death penalty is a public policy that fails the
most basic standards of justice. It is time for a moratorium and a
comprehensive review.
(Associated Baptist Press, February 8, 2007).
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