Supreme Court mulls lethal injec­tions as Christian sup­port for the death penal­ty drops.
by Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra

Christianity Today
2/​19/​2008

The U.S. Supreme Court heard argu­ments against Kentucky’s lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dure in January, as attor­neys for two death row inmates con­tend­ed that when done incor­rect­ly, the pro­ce­dure — which involves three shots to numb, par­a­lyze, and kill — can cause extreme pain to the prisoner.

While the issue before the Supreme Court is nar­row, the nation­al mood on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment itself seems to be shift­ing. New Jersey became the 14th state to out­law exe­cu­tions in December 2007. And a Pew Forum poll tak­en last August found that pub­lic sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has dropped to 62 per­cent from a high of 80 per­cent in 1994. White evan­gel­i­cals are still the death penal­ty’s strongest sup­port­ers, with 74 per­cent approval, but that is down from 82 per­cent in 1996.

Some Christians have been dis­turbed by the dis­pro­por­tion­ate num­ber of poor and African American pris­on­ers on death row, said John Whitehead, pres­i­dent of the Rutherford Institute, a con­ser­v­a­tive civ­il lib­er­ties orga­ni­za­tion. According to a January poll done by NationalChristianPoll​.com, a research ser­vice of CT par­ent com­pa­ny Christianity Today International, about two-thirds of active Christians who oppose cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment are trou­bled by mis­takes in the legal sys­tem that could lead to the exe­cu­tion of innocent people.

It’s anti-evan­gel­i­cal to kill peo­ple,” Whitehead said. Christianity is redemp­tive. But you can’t redeem peo­ple by extin­guish­ing them.” Whitehead believes oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty will gain momen­tum in the future. Young Christians are see­ing right away that, hey, the meek and mild Jesus — would he pull the lever? Would he put the hood on and pull the lever? I don’t think so.”

The num­bers may sup­port Whitehead’s the­o­ry. Only 55 per­cent of Americans ages 18 – 29 sup­port the death penal­ty, accord­ing to David Masci of the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. But Masci isn’t ready to call it a trend. I don’t think we can tell,” he said. The live-and-let-live atti­tude of youth may change as they get old­er, he said.

Masci said sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has fluc­tu­at­ed dur­ing the past half-cen­tu­ry. Briefly, dur­ing the 1960s, more Americans opposed exe­cu­tions than sup­port­ed them. But the next three decades saw a steady rise in sup­port, with approval peak­ing in the 1990s.

Obviously, we can’t know for sure what exact­ly drove pub­lic opin­ion, but it cer­tain­ly tracks well with an increase in the crime rates dur­ing those years,” Masci said. As crime rates began to fall in the 90s, so did sup­port for executions.

Support or oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty does­n’t seem tight­ly tied to the teach­ings of the church, Masci said. While most main­line Protestant church­es and the Roman Catholic Church oppose the death penal­ty, their mem­bers aren’t far behind evan­gel­i­cals in sup­port of it. Furthermore, NationalChristianPoll​.com found that just 60 per­cent of active Christians who sup­port cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment say they do so because of bib­li­cal teach­ing. (Its pow­er as a deter­rent to future crimes ranked near­ly as high, at 59 percent.)

The divide is seen most clear­ly along racial lines. According to the Pew Forum poll, black Protestants oppose the death penal­ty by 51 per­cent. While African Americans made up 13 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion in 2006, they con­sti­tut­ed near­ly 42 per­cent of death row inmates.

My sense is that his­tor­i­cal depth and think­ing through the prin­ci­ples of moral deci­sions about this mat­ter isn’t done,” said James Skillen, pres­i­dent of the Center for Public Justice. While there is a bib­li­cal basis for the death penal­ty, he said, most peo­ple don’t know the prin­ci­ple behind it or rec­og­nize the mis­use of that principle.

The lethal injec­tion method before the Supreme Court is used in all but one of the 36 states with the death penal­ty. A de fac­to mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions has been in place since the Supreme Court agreed to hear the Kentucky case, Baze v. Rees, in September.