In his new book, Executing Grace, evan­gel­i­cal Christian speak­er, activist, and author Shane Claiborne weaves togeth­er per­son­al nar­ra­tives, the­ol­o­gy, and research to make a Christian case against the death penal­ty. Claiborne says “[t]he death penal­ty did not flour­ish in America in spite of Christians but because of us.” Arguing that “[w]e can’t make death penal­ty his­to­ry until we make death penal­ty per­son­al,” he tells the sto­ries of peo­ple affect­ed by the death penal­ty in a vari­ety of ways: fam­i­ly mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims, exe­cu­tion­ers and cor­rec­tions offi­cers, death row exonerees, and death row inmates. Each chap­ter clos­es with an indi­vid­ual sto­ry he calls Faces of Grace.” Claiborne also explores bib­li­cal his­to­ry and the Bible’s teach­ings on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, for­give­ness, and mer­cy. Archbishop Desmond Tutu said, In these pages, Shane Claiborne expos­es the harm that the death penal­ty does to us as humans – to exe­cu­tion­ers, judges, gov­er­nors, to the con­vict­ed and the exon­er­at­ed, and to all of us as cit­i­zens. Here is an invi­ta­tion to build a world where we reject all forms of killing, both legal and ille­gal. It is a call to join a move­ment where grace gets the last word. Shane Claiborne’s bril­liant book reminds us that with­out for­give­ness, there is no future.”

(S. Claiborne, Executing Grace,” HarperCollins, 2016.) See Books and Religion. Shane Claiborne will speak at the Annual Fast and Vigil to Abolish the Death Penalty in Washington, DC on June 30.

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