What does the cross tell us about the ethics of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment?
by Tobias Winright
Sojourners Magazine
April 2007

At Easter, Christians cel­e­brate the res­ur­rec­tion of Jesus Christ from death and the tomb. We praise God who raised, and there­by vin­di­cat­ed, the false­ly accused Innocent One who three days ear­li­er was exe­cut­ed by cru­ci­fix­ion at the hands of an occu­py­ing Roman mil­i­tary force. Considered one of the cru­elest, most humil­i­at­ing meth­ods of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, the cross was reserved by the Romans for slaves who were thieves and for rebels who were not Roman cit­i­zens. Especially dur­ing the high­ly charged atmos­phere of the Passover fes­ti­val, which com­mem­o­rates the Israelites’ ear­li­er lib­er­a­tion from the oppres­sive Egyptians, the Roman gov­er­nor, Pontius Pilate, and his troops were on red alert for insur­rec­tion­ist threats from Zealots among the Jewish population.

Meanwhile, the reli­gious coun­cil in Jerusalem, the Sanhedrin, accused Jesus before Pilate of being pre­cise­ly such a mal­con­tent: We found this man per­vert­ing our nation, for­bid­ding us to pay tax­es to the emper­or, and say­ing that he him­self is an anoint­ed king” (Luke 23:2b). They appar­ent­ly hoped that focus­ing atten­tion on this man from Galilee might fore­stall any Roman coun­terin­sur­gency reprisals. In a suc­cinct artic­u­la­tion of this sort of con­se­quen­tial­ist rea­son­ing, Caiaphas, the high priest, averred: “[I]t is bet­ter … to have one man die for the peo­ple than to have the whole nation destroyed” (John 11:50). This is a quin­tes­sen­tial case of scapegoating.

FOR THIS REASON, Baptist ethi­cist Glen H. Stassen writes, Christians who remem­ber that their Lord was unjust­ly and cru­el­ly giv­en the death penal­ty have a hard time being enthu­si­as­tic about impos­ing the death penal­ty on oth­ers.” Of course, one might dis­agree with this state­ment by not­ing that there are those who are guilty, unlike Jesus, who should still have the death penal­ty imposed on them (in a just and humane way). And Stassen’s com­ment is not descrip­tive­ly accu­rate of Christians his­tor­i­cal­ly. In much of the Christian tra­di­tion until recent decades, cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was sup­port­ed. During the 13th cen­tu­ry, for exam­ple, Thomas Aquinas wrote that it may be jus­ti­fi­able to kill a sin­ner just as it is to kill a beast, for as Aristotle points out, an evil man is worse than a beast, and more harmful.”

Nevertheless, Stassen is spot on pre­scrip­tive­ly, that is, with regard to how Christians ought to be and behave when it comes to the issue of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. As he goes on to say, The cross on Christian church­es sig­ni­fies not that we should advo­cate more cross­es for oth­ers, but that we all need mer­cy.” On this basis, Christians should take issue with state exe­cu­tions regard­less of whether a per­son on death row is guilty or inno­cent, or regard­less of whether lethal injec­tion is cru­el or humane. In short, exe­cut­ing peo­ple is moral­ly wrong in principle.

This is not to say that the cur­rent pub­lic debate about ques­tions of inno­cence, race, cost, and deter­rence in rela­tion to the death penal­ty are unim­por­tant. Indeed, due to seri­ous con­cerns about these mat­ters, 10 states have put exe­cu­tions effec­tive­ly on hold while their cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment laws and prac­tices are under review. Two of these states, Illinois and New Jersey, present­ly have for­mal mora­to­ria on all exe­cu­tions, while the oth­er eight states are recon­sid­er­ing their use of lethal injec­tion. The death penal­ty is being imple­ment­ed less fre­quent­ly even in those states that con­tin­ue to exe­cute. During 2006, only 14 of the 38 states with cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment car­ried out any exe­cu­tions, and only six states exe­cut­ed more than one per­son. The num­ber of exe­cu­tions in 2006 was 12 per­cent less than in 2005 and 46 per­cent less than in 1999. According to the Death Penalty Information Center, the num­ber of death sen­tences giv­en annu­al­ly is at a 30-year low.

Accordingly, Christians who are opposed to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment on moral grounds can prag­mat­i­cal­ly sup­port their posi­tion with stud­ies and data that show the pat­terns of race-of-vic­tim or race-of-defen­dant dis­crim­i­na­tion in cap­i­tal cas­es; that most crim­i­nol­o­gists and police chiefs don’t think cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is an effec­tive deter­rent to mur­der; and that the total costs of the death penal­ty exceed those of life-with­out-parole sen­tences. Such infor­ma­tion is per­sua­sive to many fel­low cit­i­zens who may not share the­o­log­i­cal con­vic­tions against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. The fact that 123 per­sons since 1973 have been released from death row with evi­dence of their inno­cence has appar­ent­ly giv­en pause to many peo­ple, per­haps lead­ing them into deep­er moral reflec­tion on the death penalty.

Not all peo­ple, how­ev­er, are so per­suad­ed. Some may acknowl­edge that it is sta­tis­ti­cal­ly like­ly that inno­cent per­sons have been put to death by the state, but they go on to say that this is an accept­able risk in order to pro­tect even more inno­cent per­sons. In oth­er words, they con­tin­ue to believe that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment deters oth­ers from com­mit­ting mur­der. For exam­ple, Ernest van den Haag writes, It fol­lows that the irrev­o­ca­ble injus­tice some­times inflict­ed by the death penal­ty would not sig­nif­i­cant­ly mil­i­tate against it, if cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment deters enough mur­ders to reduce the total num­ber of inno­cents killed so that few­er are lost than would be lost without it.”

Others, such as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, note that at present there is no con­clu­sive DNA evi­dence that an inno­cent per­son has indeed been exe­cut­ed. Last year, Justice Scalia said that although no crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem can com­plete­ly rule out the pos­si­bil­i­ty that some­one will be pun­ished mis­tak­en­ly,” this like­li­hood in the U.S. has been reduced to an insignif­i­cant min­i­mum.” It is not too dif­fi­cult to dis­cern echoes of Caiaphas in these kinds of respons­es to the pos­si­ble death of inno­cents in exe­cu­tion cham­bers in the U.S.

So, while Christians indeed should muster all of the argu­ments they can bring to bear on the sub­ject of the death penal­ty, not every­one will be per­suad­ed by, or inter­pret, evi­dence the same way. Even many fel­low Christians in the pews con­tin­ue to dis­agree on this issue. Anti-death-penal­ty cru­sad­er Sister Helen Prejean and Justice Scalia, both Roman Catholics, obvi­ous­ly dif­fer. At present, while sup­port for the death penal­ty is decreas­ing among Roman Catholics, one 2005 sur­vey shows that 57 per­cent of Catholics still sup­port stiffer enforce­ment of it, although gen­er­a­tional dif­fer­ences are strik­ing, with only 41 per­cent of peo­ple under 30 approv­ing it. I pro­pose, there­fore, that Christians first get our the­o­log­i­cal and moral bear­ings straight, which brings me back to Stassen’s remarks ear­li­er about Jesus’ crucifixion.

THEOLOGIANKARL BARTH put the mat­ter this way: Now that Jesus Christ has been nailed to the cross for the sins of the world, how can we still use the thought of expi­a­tion to estab­lish the death penalty?”

The tra­di­tion­al sat­is­fac­tion the­o­ry of atone­ment holds that the sac­ri­fi­cial death of God’s son, Jesus, is required by God to atone for humankind’s sin — to sat­is­fy” humankind’s debt to God. This the­o­ry may con­tribute to ongo­ing sup­port by Christians of the death penal­ty. In his The Executed God: The Way of the Cross in Lockdown America, Mark Lewis Taylor sug­gests that Christian scape­goat­ing inter­pre­ta­tions of Jesus’ death bear a sig­nif­i­cant respon­si­bil­i­ty for today’s the­atrics of ter­ror, as we suf­fer it in the form of pris­ons, endem­ic police bru­tal­i­ty, and state-sanctioned executions.”

Sister Prejean right­ly calls this the­ol­o­gy into ques­tion: 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’?” This lat­ter pos­si­bil­i­ty is just as salvif­ic, mak­ing God and humankind at one again.

Mennonite the­olo­gian John Howard Yoder argued that in the ancient bib­li­cal cul­tures exe­cu­tions were not only crim­i­nal pun­ish­ment but also a form of sac­ri­fi­cial repa­ra­tions to pla­cate a God who they believed required such prac­tices for atone­ment. Dennis Gaertner, in the Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible, writes that exe­cu­tion by ston­ing in the Hebrew scrip­tures was an action con­vey­ing a cor­po­rate oblig­a­tion for remov­ing sin from the com­mu­ni­ty.” A seri­ous crime or a sin com­mit­ted by one per­son could result in God’s pun­ish­ment upon the entire com­mu­ni­ty; there­fore, if known, the per­pe­tra­tor was executed.

If Jesus’ death has done away with the sac­ri­fi­cial sys­tem, and if part of that edi­fice was cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, then just as Christians no longer prac­tice ani­mal and grain sac­ri­fices, so too we ought not to per­form human sac­ri­fice by exe­cut­ing crim­i­nals. Indeed, as the preach­er of the papal house­hold, Father Raniero Cantalamessa, has said, Jesus, by his teach­ing and by his life, has unmasked and bro­ken for­ev­er the sys­tem that makes some­thing sacral of vio­lence.” Cantalamessa added that it is the cel­e­bra­tion of the Eucharist, the sacra­ment of non­vi­o­lence,” that makes present God’s absolute no’ to vio­lence, spo­ken on the cross, [which] echoes alive down the centuries.”

If more Christians were to believe this is real­ly true dur­ing wor­ship, and to pray for the grace of God to help them embody it in turn in their own lives, sup­port for the death penal­ty would dra­mat­i­cal­ly decrease. A recent Gallup sur­vey sug­gests some basis for hope: Americans who attend reli­gious ser­vices on a reg­u­lar basis are slight­ly less like­ly to sup­port the death penal­ty than those who attend less fre­quent­ly. … 65 per­cent of those who attend ser­vices week­ly or near­ly week­ly favor cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, com­pared with 69 per­cent of those who attend ser­vices month­ly and 71 per­cent of those who sel­dom or never attend.”

Finally, con­trary to what Justice Scalia has assert­ed, one does not have to be ide­o­log­i­cal­ly dri­ven” in order to call into ques­tion the death penal­ty. Lest I be accused of being a bleed­ing heart lib­er­al, I should point out that I have sev­er­al years of law enforce­ment expe­ri­ence, the bulk of it as a cor­rec­tions offi­cer. Assigned to a large max­i­mum secu­ri­ty jail, I often found myself wit­ness­ing human nature at its worst. Opposition to the death penal­ty does not come eas­i­ly for me. Nevertheless, I hope I am indeed the­o­log­i­cal­ly dri­ven in my stance against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. From a Christian moral per­spec­tive, even the guilty should not be pun­ished with death. Perhaps instead of hav­ing more dead men walk­ing,” we should send the death penalty walking.

A for­mer law enforce­ment offi­cer, Tobias Winright is a Catholic moral the­olo­gian at St. Louis University.