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Testimony In Favor of the Death Penalty
Louis P. Pojman
Author and Professor of Philosophy, U.S. Military Academy. Excerpt from
"The Death Penalty: For and Against," (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers,
Inc., 1998)
[Opponents of the capital punishment often put forth
the following argument:] Perhaps the murderer deserves to die, but what
authority does the state have to execute him or her? Both the Old and
New Testament says, 'Vengeance is mine, I will repay,' says the
Lord (Prov. 25:21 and Romans 12:19). You need special authority
to justify taking the life of a human being.
The objector fails to note that the New Testament passage
continues with a support of the right of the state to execute criminals
in the name of God: Let every person be subjected to the governing
authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that
exist have been instituted by God. Therefore he who resists what God has
appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment.... If you do wrong,
be afraid, for [the authority] does not bear the sword in vain; he is
the servant of God to execute his wrath on the wrongdoer (Romans
13: 1-4). So, according to the Bible, the authority to punish, which presumably
includes the death penalty, comes from God.
But we need not appeal to a religious justification for
capital punishment. We can site the state's role in dispensing justice.
Just as the state has the authority (and duty) to act justly in allocating
scarce resources, in meeting minimal needs of its (deserving) citizens,
in defending its citizens from violence and crime, and in not waging unjust
wars; so too does it have the authority, flowing from its mission to promote
justice and the good of its people, to punish the criminal. If the criminal,
as one who has forfeited a right to life, deserves to be executed, especially
if it will likely deter would-be murderers, the state has a duty to execute
those convicted of first-degree murder.
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