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Posts Tagged ‘death-penalty’

Death Penalty & the Taste of Ashes

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

Previous Post – Otherness & the Image of God

“Is God vengeful, demanding a death for a death? Or is God compassionate, luring souls into love so great that no one can be considered ‘enemy’?” – Sister Helen Prejean

Today is Shrove Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of Lent.  Today, many of us will feast of pancakes, symbolizing all the rich foods we will give up over the Lenten season.  Tomorrow we will mark the beginning of Lent by making the sign of the cross on our foreheads in ash, a symbol of mourning and repentance before God.

And yet, today the thought of pancakes tastes like ashes.  Today the US Supreme Court declined reviewing the death penalty case against my friend Matt Puckett.  Matt stands accused and convicted of murder, living on death row since 1996.  Matt, his family and his friends have continued to hold to his innocence of this crime.  His trial and conviction are fraught with poor evidence.  It is an injustice that must be corrected.  While it is being appealed, a date for his execution could be set for some time in the next month.

While I know many of my Christian sisters and brothers see things differently, my understanding of our faith leads me to condemn the death penalty, regardless of the guilt of innocence of the person in question.  However, that conviction is further bolstered by the continued evidence of wrongful convictions and the imprisonment and execution of the innocent. Since 1989, more than 250 people in 34 states have been exonerated through post-conviction DNA testing.  Unknown numbers of others have been wrongfully executed, never to receive the true justice they deserve.

Please pray with us as Matt’s lawyers file an appeal.  Please sign this online petition and help by telling friends & family.  Email it.  Facebook it.  Twitter it.  If you are a US citizen, write to your representatives and urge them to get involved.  Contact the governors office in Mississippi.  Do whatever you can do.  Above, please pray- pray for Matt, his family and those involved in the case.

I have received several letters from Matt describing the days following execution of his friends and fellow inmates, of his task comforting them before and of cleaning out their cells after.  It is hard for him to hold on to hope.  Only his faith in Christ  and the love of family and friends seem to give him comfort.  He holds tenuously onto any hope.  And yet it is not unlikely that Matt will be dead- killed by the state- before the end of Lent.  And so today is more like Ash Tuesday for me and many others.

Please stand with us as we pray and work for justice.

“With every cell of my being, and with every fiber of my memory, I oppose the death penalty in all forms… I do not believe any civilized society should be at the service of death. I don’t think it’s human to become an Angel of Death.”  Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor, Nobel Peace Prize winner in 1986

Tags: death-penalty, Justice
Posted in Justice | 1 Comment »

Christians & the Death Penalty

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Previous Post -Sacred Roots

There has been a lot of conversation (and grief) around the recent execution of Georgia death row inmate, Troy Davis.  Davis’s case seems to exemplify exactly the kinds of cases that has brought the death penalty under scrutiny.  When reading through the details, reasonable doubt seems to be less important than it once did.  The consequence of getting something like this wrong- which has been proven to happen far too often before- are irreversible.  There is no going back, thus the need to be as absolutely sure as possible.  Sadly, courts and systems of “justice” seem more motivated by political ends than genuine justice.

The death penalty has become far more real for me over the last year.  I have started to correspond with two death row inmates in two different states.  What distinquishes these conversations for me is the content of correspondence.  While their cases come up, the main focus of our conversations center on personal interests, family, sports and books.  What makes this so significant is that these men are no longer simply “death row inmates”.  They are friends, humanized by the mundane, everyday things that highlight our shared humanity.

What further makes these friendships unique are the particular cases.  While one is admittedly guilty of the heinous murder of two innocent youth, the other- like Davis- maintains his innocence.  Having looked at the case myself (admittedly in the limited way of an amateur), I believe he is innocent.  Yet, also like Davis, he potentially faces a state execution in the coming months.  These two friends could not be more different, yet both are just that- friends.

I am opposed to the death penalty.  While I am especially concerned with the flaws in the system that all too often send innocent people to their deaths, it goes beyond that.  I believe one of my friends is innocent and know that the other is guilty, I equally oppose their executions.  Let me be clear- I do not deny that they deserve execution.  The problem is that when we measure this issue against what a person deserves, we expose ourselves to the same fate before God.  While I will not get into the theological reasons for my convictions here (that deserves more time & space), I believe the death penalty is absolutely incompatible with following Christ.

It is far easier, not to mention socially acceptable, to opposed the execution of men like Davis, whose guilt is far from clear.  As Christians, though, we are not given that kind of freedom.  Jesus calls us to a radical, all-inclusive, offensive grace and love- a grace and love without which we would be no less guilty than the vilest criminal.  So, while I applaud the many Christian voices who have risen in response to Davis’s unjust execution, I ask that we go further.  The Christian community needs to be as indignant and passionate about every execution, regardless of guilt.

What will that mean for you?

Tags: death-penalty, Justice, Missional
Posted in Jesus, Justice | 3 Comments »

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