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Capital Punishment: "Ceremonial" or "Moral"?Sorting out Theonomic DistinctionsIn the Previous Paper we spent a lot of time analyzing some rather arcane arguments of rather unpopular theologians concerning obscure details of the Mosaic Law. But this is important. Our civilization -- "western civilization" -- is Christian civilization. A dominant influence in the formation of Western Legal Traditions has been the Church, that is, theologians, bishops, and professors at the (Christian) Universities. It is thus important to know what the theologians have said, because the legislators and kings of Western Civilization have looked to them for guidance in the formulation of civil penal codes for centuries. However, alongside the influence of the Church has been the influence of Rome, of Athens - of "classical" culture (i.e., paganism). And this is why it is even more important to understand the theologians. Although it is not our purpose in this paper to prove the point, the theologians have often looked to the Roman Empire and Greco-Roman culture for their standard of "greatness." Since they have wanted the Bible to be "great," they have "found" Greco-Roman concepts of law therein. Let's ask the theologians to show us in the Bible where the pagan concept of "capital punishment"[18] can be found. From here on out, we are going to focus on the justice of capital punishment, that is, whether or not it is just in God's eyes for a Christian (or the "State") to shed the blood of another man. We are not here considering the pragmatic reasons for and against capital punishment.[19] What we want to know is, Are the Old Testament laws concerning the shedding of human blood in response to "capital crimes" applicable in this age? We'll start with
Traditional Protestant ethics has divided the Scripture, particularly the Old Testament, into at least two divisions: The "Moral Law" and The "Ceremonial Law." Even if the theologians do not agree on a precise definition of the "Moral Law," many still agree on which laws are to be described as "Moral:" laws against theft, adultery, and murder are fairly clear. "Ceremonial Laws" are those that accomplished a pedagogical, or educational function. These laws taught the Israelites something about God's program for the salvation of the world. They taught men about the work of the coming Messiah. They were a foreshadow of things to come, and when the things foreshadowed actually came, the foreshadows had served their purpose. The most obvious laws no longer literally observed in the New Covenant are laws concerning the possession and division of the land of Palestine, laws of cleansing, and the ritual shedding of blood. We may assume that all other standing laws are binding in the New Covenant unless the New Covenant specifically teaches otherwise. This is the "theonomic" ("God's Law" [in its entirety]) position.
The best way to determine the answer to this question is to examine the purpose and function of these laws. If we find them to be laws concerning the land of Palestine, laws of cleansing, or the ceremonial shedding of blood, we might well infer that they were pedagogical laws, not to be literally obeyed in our day. An example of the problem can be found in Deuteronomy 21:1-9:
Aside from the problems we have already discussed regarding the joint-efforts of elders ("civil"?) and priests ("ecclesiastical"?), many questions concerning the New Testament obedience of this passage arise. Are the civil magistrates responsible to obey this law? Not in its Old Testament form, most would agree. When an unsolved murder takes place, no one argues that we should shed the blood of an heifer to cleanse the land of the shed blood of the victim. But, if the crime is murder and the murderer is found,[20] is it still necessary and proper in the New Testament to shed blood, in the same way the heifer's blood was shed? Why is the shedding of blood in the case of the unsolved murder no longer appropriate in the New Testament, but the shedding of the blood of the convicted murderer is appropriate?
The theonomists are pretty well agreed that it is no longer necessary to have cities of refuge to protect manslaughterers from Family vengeance-takers until the death of the high priest. Likewise, there is near-universal agreement that in the case of an unsolved murder the laws of Deuteronomy 21 no longer have a pedagogical function demanding literal obedience by civil (ecclesiastical?) officials. The problem is one of consistency: if unsolved murders no longer require the ceremonial shedding of blood, why do solved murders require a shedding of blood? Reconstructionist Gary North makes these important points in his "I.C.E. Position Paper" on the annulment of the dietary laws under the heading:
The question then must be answered by a search of all other commands to shed the blood of murderers and other capital criminals: was it the purpose of these laws to cleanse the land of blood guiltiness? Are they still required after Calvary? Let us begin in Genesis and isolate forty-four passages commanding death for certain criminals and determine the function and purpose of these commands. One: Genesis 9:4-6Here is the bedrock of Capital Punishment in the West. Throughout the history of the church, theologians who have supported capital punishment have turned to this passage for support. Even those theologians who are not "Theonomists" or "Christian Reconstructionists," and usually shy away from the Old Testament as a model for civil/criminal legislation, turn to Genesis 9 for Scriptural support of Capital Punishment. If this passage does not warrant the execution of a murderer in our society today, then surely there is no warrant at all. What does the passage say?
This is the moral justification for the State deliberately killing another human being. As we examine more passages, this one will become clearer. The word "blood" appears in red, as does "the life," because
There are some other questions we can ask.[21]
Two: Exodus 21:12-14
(Compare 1 Kings 2:26-33) On verse 13, see Numbers 35. Exodus 21:15-17
Three: Exodus 22:18-20
A: Strong's #2763. The word is often translated "devoted" or "accursed" (Joshua 7). The Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament says that this word
We shall consider this concept again when we come to Deuteronomy 13:12-18. Four: Exodus 21:28-29
Five: Exodus 31:14-15
Six: Exodus 32:25-29
Seven: Leviticus 17
Consider how the Pharisees abused these concepts. See Leviticus 19:17-18. Leviticus 18-20In these chapters we have many ceremonial laws as well as laws that surely obligate the Christian today. Our task is to decide which are which. Or put another way, which of these laws should the Church have been telling the State to enact as "civil law" over the centuries? Let us consider one passage at a time and ask whether the law is a "ceremonial" or a "moral" law. If we make no other point in this section, it is that the line between "ceremonial" and "moral" laws is often assumed to be an easy one, yet the line is not quite so hard and fast. We may have been mistaken in telling the State to execute criminals based on these verses. Eight: Leviticus 18:1-5Consider the terms "judgments," "ordinances," and "statutes."
Nine: Leviticus 18:6-18Most people categorize these laws as "moral," as well as verses 20-23. But what about Ten: Leviticus 18:19
Eleven: Leviticus 18:24-30Assuming the majority of these laws are "moral," we must recognize that the violation of many "moral" laws required "ceremonial" responses or remedies such as a ritual cleansing or shedding of blood. In the New Testament the crime may remain even if the ceremonial remedy was designed to teach the Israelites about the work of Christ in the New Covenant. Thus, the Canaanites were made the object of national sacrifice in order to cleanse the defilement of Palestine. Even Israelites are not exempt from this requirement, since they too can defile the land (v. 29).
Twelve: Leviticus 19:1-2Quoted in I Peter 1:15-16. Thirteen: Leviticus 19:3-4The Fifth, Fourth, First, and Second Commandments. Fourteen: Leviticus 19:5-8
Fifteen: Leviticus 19:9-10A Law requiring mercy to the poor. "Moral," most would agree. Sixteen: Leviticus 19:11-12The Eighth, Ninth, and Third Commandments. Seventeen: Leviticus 19:13Although certainly an application of the Eighth Commandment, few believe that this law is to be applied today. Why not? Do we determine the kind of culture we should have by the Law of God, or do we determine the kind of laws we should have by our culture? Eighteen: Leviticus 19:14-15,16More laws concerning the poor, and an application of the Ninth Commandment. Nineteen: Leviticus 19:17-18An application of the Sixth Commandment that was utterly ignored by the Pharisees (Matthew 5:43-48). Christians are commanded to rebuke sin by the Word of God (Matthew 18:15; Luke 17:3; Galatians 6:1). This is the way, as we have seen, we avoid the imputation of their blood upon us (see comments on Leviticus 17, above). The command not to avenge takes on new meaning in the New Covenant (Romans 12:17). What implications does this command have on the issue of capital punishment? If it was a serious matter to disobey the ceremonial pictures of Christ, what kind of penalty would attach to the rejection of Christ Himself (Hebrews 10, whole chapter)? Twenty: Leviticus 19:19
Twenty-One: Leviticus 19:20-22
Twenty-Two: Leviticus 19:23-25
Twenty-Three: Leviticus 19:26
Twenty-Four: Leviticus 19:27-28
Twenty-Five: Leviticus 19:29-37I think most would agree that the remainder of Leviticus 19 is abiding Law, even if it is ignored (e.g., verses 32, 35-36) in modern practice. Twenty-Six: Leviticus 20:1-6It may be difficult to understand what a modern application of giving one's seed to the State might be. It warranted the shedding of blood. Likewise did an involvement in the occult. If the people refuse to take action against such a person, God Himself will (vv. 4-5). Twenty-Seven: Leviticus 20:7-17, 19-24We see here a parallel to the first half of Leviticus 18. The difference is the penalties attached. In Leviticus 18:24ff., we saw that the sins of the Canaanites demanded national sacrifice, that is, a sacrificing of the Canaanites themselves. But the same action must be taken in the case of the Israelites: "their blood shall be upon them" (vv. 9,11,12,13,16,27), and "they shall bear their iniquity" (v. 17,19-20). In contrast to sexual sin with a slave girl (Leviticus 19:20) which (for some reason) is only unclean enough (cp. 20:21) to warrant the sacrifice of a ram, the sins outlined in Leviticus 18 and 20 can only be dealt with by the sacrifice of the sinners themselves (20:14). Twenty-Eight: Leviticus 20:18Q. 38: "Moral" crime? "Ceremonial" cleansing? Or vice versa? Twenty-Nine: Leviticus 20:25-27As in Genesis 9, the commands for "capital punishment" stand next to commands to observe the clean/unclean distinction in foods. Thirty: Leviticus 24:11-16,23Blasphemy is so serious that whoever curses God must bear his own sin. This sacrifice took place outside the camp (verse 14, Hebrews 13:11). Of course, Christians are to put the defiled outside their camp as well (2 Thessalonians 3:6,14; I Timothy 6:5; I Corinthians 5:4-7) but
Thirty-One: Leviticus 24:17-22
Thirty-Two: Numbers 15:30-36Verse 34 seems to indicate that living under the Mosaic "theocracy" did not provide clear and sure understanding of what to do in a given situation.
Thirty-Three: Numbers 35We consider briefly the role of the kinsman-redeemer in Appendix A. The Patriarchal character of the Old Testament is made clear in this "office." It is the next of kin who revenges God's wrath against wrongdoers who have wronged a member of the ga'al's family. Wrongs against the LORD seem to be expiated by the congregation as a whole stoning the offender. Is there any room for the "State"? Most theonomists are agreed that since the manslayer was free after the death of the high priest (verse 32) that this law no longer functions in the New Covenant, following the death of the Great High Priest (i.e., Jesus Christ - Hebrews 3:1). But we have again two elements that create much confusion concerning the death of either the murderer or the high priest: those elements are blood, and the promised land (verses 31-34).
The word "satisfaction" in v. 31 means "substitutionary atonement" If it is true that "there can be no expiation for the land but by the blood of the murderer," then we need capital punishment today.
Thirty-Four: Deuteronomy 13:1-11We looked at this passage briefly to establish that family members are not excluded from either the judging (Numbers 35:12,24) nor the execution process (Deuteronomy 13:6). Thirty-Five: Deuteronomy 13:12-18We ran across a similar verse in Exodus 22:18-20, and we looked up the word "utterly destroyed" or "devoted to destruction." This concept of "devoted to destruction" sheds much light on the "holy wars" of the Old Testament. These wars would seem to be acts of national capital punishment, in which an entire nation or city was devoted to the LORD as a sacrifice. This is clearly taught in Scripture (Zephaniah 1:4-13, esp. 7-8; Jeremiah 46:10; Isaiah 34:2- 6; Ezekiel 39:18-20). Thus, we no longer have "holy wars" because they were the ritual shedding of blood on a national scale, which cleansed the land of Palestine (Deuteronomy 32: 43, NIV and LXX). Warfare was an act of ceremonial service (Numbers 4:23,30).
First, the action of the sword in the hands of Christians is the Power of the Word of God (Ephesians 6:17), which is the Word of Christ (II Thessalonians 2:8; Revelation 19:15). But this was known in the Old Testament, where the word for "the edge of the sword" is also the word for "commandment" as well as for "mouth" (I Samuel 12:14; cp. Isaiah 11:4; Hosea 6:5).
Second, we are to be the salt of the earth (Matthew 5:13). Christians have often ignored or misunderstood the words of our Lord in the Sermon on the Mount when He tells us that the ceremonial laws of national sacrifice are to be fulfilled in His saints. By applying the Sword of the Lord, we obey the Levitical commands concerning ritual sacrifice, which were designed in part to teach the effect God's Word would have when faithfully declared. Leviticus 2:13 commanded that all offerings should be salted with salt (Ezekiel 43:24). The offerings were nevertheless consumed by the fire. If the offerings were without sin they would not have been consumed (Malachi 3:1-6). In the New Covenant, the holy ones are baptized with fire (Matthew 3:11) and are not consumed. It is the Word of God that preserves them against fire (II Peter 3:7). In the same way, we are to keep the mouth of our sword salty (Colossians 4:6). Those in whom the salt abides shall be preserved against the fire; those who remain unsalted shall be consumed by the fire (Mark 9:43-48).
The response to a false prophet is parallel to the response to a seducing city or
nation: the entire city is put to death; even the cattle are sacrificed (vv. 15-16).
Nothing that is "cursed" or "devoted" to be "utterly
destroyed" (same word in each case) is to have a part in the Israelite camp (v. 17).
Those who have followed the Protestant Reformers have always left untouched the sovereignty of the secular princes. We don't declare holy war on occultic, socialistic, or demonic nations because the reigning doctrine of Sovereignty is political (polis-centered) and statist, not Family-centered and Biblical; Secular Humanists (and Christians educated in Roman Law traditions) want to recognize and give due political deference to the "legitimacy" of all nations,[22] from Khadafy and Saddam Hussein to emerging third-world dictatorships rooted in terrorism -- simply because they are secular, non-church, polis-centered institutions. "Birds of a feather etc."
A New Testament Theocracy, or Christocracy, would in fact mean complete de-polis-ization; Christ, not man, is King; God, not the State, is Divine. Every believer has access to God's revelation which is complete, clear, and unmediated as in the Old Testament. Thirty-Six: Deuteronomy 17:2-7Verse 7 is most interesting. It tells us that the death of the idolaters puts the evil out of Israel (cf. v. 12). It also tells us that the witnesses are to initiate the execution, yet no restriction is placed upon members of the idolater's family. Let us also pay some attention to the details in this verse and others.
The participation of witnesses in the stoning, as well as the Congregation, cannot be discontinued. Replacement of the witnesses and the Congregation by professional executioners is non-theonomic. Bureaucratized shedding of blood is simply fascism as an answer to crime, knowing that since witnesses would be required to stone a convicted criminal, fewer would testify and help bring about a conviction. Congregational participation clearly requires and cultivates personal responsibility and community morality. Stoning a man, shedding his blood until he dies, then removing his mangled corpse outside the city limits, certainly teaches the witnesses and the congregation more than the cleaner death by electricity, gas, or lethal injection, performed behind the closed doors of the penitentiary labyrinth by anonymous professional bureaucrats. (Yet if we were to follow God's Law in exhaustive detail we might find the ceremonial character of the shedding of blood would be more evident.) Thirty-Seven: Deuteronomy 17:8-13The Lord would appoint a certain place where the laws of the Israelite church-state would be administered (Deuteronomy 12:5,13-14). Difficult legal problems could be brought to this place and the priests and judges could render a decision. If a man hardened his heart against the decision of the priest he would be executed.
Thirty-Eight: Deuteronomy 17:13The issue of deterrence is not relevant to our study, because if deterrence were the only consideration, mass executions would certainly deter people (it would terrorize them!), but it certainly would not be Biblical. We might suggest, however, that what really deterred crime was not the execution of the criminal alone, but the community and personal responsibility which was a manifestation of a solid commitment to Biblical morality and God's Law. When witnesses and the congregation are willing to throw stones at a man until he dies before their eyes, all in response to the command of God, it is evident that the level of morality in the community is strong, and probably extends to other areas, such as Biblical Law concerning hospitality to the poor, economic justice, and fair employment, which, when obeyed, tend to reduce crime (Deuteronomy 19:9-10). Personal, community responsibility in every-day areas of life is what prevents criminals and criminal groups from emerging, not fascistic executions bureaucrat/gestapo-style. (Not to suggest that all executions are such, only those taking place in a moral and community vacuum at the urging of those who simply want delinquents (and delinquency) out of sight and out of mind.) Thirty-Nine: Deuteronomy 19:11-13; 16-21Forty: Deuteronomy 21:1-9We have already looked at this passage when we began the survey of Scripture passages, but note verse 9, which is similar to Deuteronomy 19:13, above. In 19:13, we might think that killing the criminal by shedding his blood (and thereby ridding the community of his presence) is the means to the end of "putting away the guilt of innocent blood from Israel." We take this to mean we get rid of the criminal. But in fact, we are getting rid of the religious ("ceremonial"?) guilt of innocent blood, cleansing the land of that stain. Deuteronomy 21:9 shows this, in that the criminal is still present in the land, since his identity was not known, but by shedding blood the guilt of the wrongful shedding of innocent blood is put away from Israel.
This is not a law which is designed to "keep criminals off the streets." It is a law which makes atonement for sin by the shedding of blood, whether that of the criminal or an animal substitute.
Forty-One: Deuteronomy 21:18-23
Forty-Two: Deuteronomy 22:13-27Forty-Three: Deuteronomy 24:7Forty-Four: Deuteronomy 25:1-3Have I left out any passages that should have been examined? The first town does not change. The second town, initially more corrupt than the first, recognizes its sin and, to a man, atones for that sin by shedding guilty blood. The killers are killed. http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north45.html NOTES18 . i.e., a non-liturgical "punishment" meted out solely (monopolistically) by the "State." [Back to text]19. In another paper we suggest that the pragmatic rationale for capital punishment (e.g., reduction of crime) is a test better answered by strengthening Christian families than by strengthening the State. [Back to text] 20. If the killing was accidental and the killer is found, he was to flee to the City of Refuge until the death of the High Priest. Should this be the pattern today? [Back to text] 21. Obviously the most basic question to be asked is the question that undergirds this whole paper: Does God still require us to shed the blood of criminals? Questions 13 and 14 are somewhat trivial in comparison, though they may shed some light on the matter. [Back to text] 22. When Saddam Hussein attacks George Bush's friends, George Bush compels powerless American youths to take guns and bombs over to Iraq. Hearing Bush's threats, Saddam Hussein compels powerless Iraqis to meet the Americans with guns and bombs purchased from Western arms dealers with money received from Bush a year earlier when Saddam and Bush were on speaking terms. What right do these two men have to force others to kill and be killed for them? Bush claims that in war it is "tragic but unavoidable" that innocent men, women, and children will be killed, but it must be so, because Saddam Hussein "represents" them as "their" leader. The Myth of Political "Legitimacy" cost the lives of 200,000 in Iraq and over 100,000,000 in the 20th century. [Back to text] Genesis 9 is probably popular with non-Theonomic scholars because Noah is more popular than Moses, whose laws called for the execution of homosexuals, adulterers, and others (all-too-frequently found in antinomian circles), and was just more demanding and specific than Noah, whose law was vague and only applied to bad guys like murderers. [Back to Text]1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44
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