| A Fresh Look at the Death Penalty
A Pastoral Exhortation
Holy Week like no other time in the year helps us to understand
more clearly and appropriate more fully the depth of Christ’s
love and sacrifice for us. The Passion accounts that we read
unveil humanity’s capacity to disregard violently the
dignity and value of each human life. We realize this when
Jesus, both God and man, humbles himself to endure state-sanctioned
torture and death.
When we recall the Way of the Cross that Jesus traveled,
Good Friday is an appropriate time to join once again with
the Bishops of the United States to reiterate the Church’s
opposition to the death penalty and to urge everyone to reflect
on the many implications of the death penalty.
One cannot consider the issue of capital punishment without
taking into account the devastating impact that violent crime
has on society as well as on individual victims. The cost
of crime and violence is very real and has intense ramifications.
The Church’s opposition to the death penalty in no way
minimizes the horror of the actions of those who take the
lives of others, particularly when they do so in a senseless
and brutal manner.
We need to recognize evil and name it for what it is. As
Christians, we must pastorally respond to those who have been
victimized by violent crime, comfort them in their pain and
grief, and seek justice.
How we respond to offenders also says much about what we
value. As Christians, we must respond to them in ways that
are reflective of the teachings of Christ, imitating His steadfast
compassion and forgiveness. Forgiveness is a gift from God
that should never be minimized. Forgiveness by its very nature
impacts the lives of all involved – those who receive
it as well as those who offer it. In their 2000 statement,
Choose Life, the Bishops of Pennsylvania taught us that “true
emotional, spiritual, and even physical healing is found in
the compassionate embrace of Jesus, who practiced forgiveness
and teaches us to do the same.”
We are called to recognize the face of God in everyone –
even the criminal. The destruction of human life, even in
the form of capital punishment, takes away a gift that is
God’s alone to take. Capital punishment is irreparable.
It can also turn the very institution that serves as an instrument
of justice into a means of seeking revenge. The practice of
capital punishment perpetuates the cycle of violence that
it was intended to end.
When we execute someone, we extinguish the possibility for
rehabilitation and atonement. Ezekiel tells us that God does
not take “pleasure in the death of the wicked man, but
rather in the wicked man’s conversion, that he may live”
(Ezekiel 33.11). As Christians, we should take seriously our
role to foster conversion and rehabilitation. We should never
look to death as a solution.
The Catholic Church has always taught that legitimate civil
authority has the power to enforce law, prosecute law-breakers,
imprison convicted criminals, and even inflict the supreme
penalty. Yet the Church also recognizes that less than lethal
means are now available to protect society, nullifying the
need to utilize the death penalty.
In addition to recognizing that societies are now able adequately
to defend individuals from violent criminals, the Church has
also become aware that capital punishment falls disproportionately
on racial minorities, the uneducated, the poor and the disadvantaged.
Too often, inadequate and ineffective legal representation
has resulted in innocent people being sentenced to death and
perhaps sometimes executed.
In recent years, a number of death row inmates have been
exonerated, especially through the introduction of DNA evidence,
revealing a disquieting fact that the capital punishment system
is seriously flawed. It is misguided to use death as a punishment
when it must be administered by a system that admittedly relies
on a fallible human component.
All human life must be treated with respect because all life
comes from God. In the long-standing Judeo-Christian tradition
we speak of the sacredness of human life because we recognize
that it is a gift beyond our giving. We do not bring life
into the world. We can cooperate with God in generating human
life but we do not create it. Once life is ended, we cannot
bring it back.
At the heart of our profound respect for human life and also
our need to teach that respect in word and deed is our conviction
that human beings are created in the image of God who loves
us beyond our imagining. It is this love which calls us to
oppose the death penalty, to reach out with compassion to
families of the victims of capital crime, and to promote a
civilization and culture of life.
Holy Week, 2005
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